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SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL; OR,
A COLLECTION OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR SODALITIES OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN.
BY
REV.
FATHER
F. X.
{Translate*!
from
SCHOUPPE,
tfce
BY
Miss
ELLA McMAHON
BOSTON:
THOMAS 17, 19,
NOONAN
B. AND
21
& CO.,
BOYLSTON STREET. 1882.
SJ.
DEC
i
6
Copyright, 1882, by
THOMAS B NOON AN &
CO.,
Opus sub
titulo
Manuel
des Direct eurs de Congregations, a patre
F. X. Schouppe, S.J., conscriptum, rite
examinatum, vulgar! permit-
timus. F. X.
VAN DER HOEVEN,
S.J.,
Prcep. Prov. Belg*
DATUM BRUXELLIS,
We
13 Januarii, 1881.
willingly permit the
Manual.
publication of this Sodality Director s
and practical doctrine upon the duties and the too numerous dangers which virtue en
Filled with a solid
of the Christian
life,
counters at the present day, this excellent
only to directors of Sodalities, but to
all
work
will
be very useful not
engaged in the instruction
of youth.
V. A.
CARDINAL DESCHAMPS, Arch, of Malines.
MALINES, January
25, 1881,
Feast of the Conversion of
St.
Paul.
CONTENTS. PAGE
PREFACE,
CHAPTER
I I
II.
III.
Origin and Nature of Confraternities.
Their Advantages, Duties of Sodalists,
.... .... .... .... ....
IV. Happiness of the Faithful Sodalist,
V. The Christian
Life,
VI. Solid Virtue,
VII. Causes of Defection, VIII. Hatred of Sin,
.
IX. Purity of Conscience,
.
.
Word
.
God and Reading,
science,
XIII. Holy
32 38 .
46 55
62 68 74
of
XII. Confession and Examination of
4<
26
.
X. Prayer, XI. The
5
12
Communion, v
82
Con
....
96
CONTENTS.
vi
PAGE
CHAPTER
XIV. Annual
XV.
11
Retreat,
Passions ing
who
Happiness
Means
Them,
V
XVIII.
XIX. The Two "
XX.
Temptations, Capital Sins, Pride,
XXIV.
XXV.
.
XXVI.
Lust,
Envy,
.
.125
.
V
.
.
.
^
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Sloth,
XXIX. The
XXX.
134
140
151
-159 .164 .167 .170 .174
.
.
.
.
.
146
.148
...
3
.
.
.
.
7
XXVIII.
130
... ...
....
i,
Gluttony,
XXVII. Anger,
119
.
.
XXIII. Covetousness,
"
.
Conquering
.
.
m
Man
of the
Standards,
XXI. XXII.
of
Combat,
Spiritual
Conquer
....
Master of Them,
is
XVII. Passions
"
of
Necessity
Them,
XVI. Passions
"
.105
.
178
World,
Double
Principle of Conduct,
.
183
i
XXXI. "
XXXII.
Sins of Thought, of
Mortal and Venial Sin,
XXXIII. Predominant "
XXXIV.
"
XXXV.
"
XXXVI.
Word,
Fault,
... ...
Formation of Character, Spirit of
Labor and Order,
Career and Vocation,
.
192 197
205
.
211
.
220
...
228
CONTENTS.
vil
PAGE
CHAPTER XXXVII. True Happiness,
XXXVIII. "
Faith,
238
.
.
.
.
.
.
.248
.
.
263
.
.
271
.
.
277
XXXIX. Hope,
255 i
LX. "
"
Charity,
XLI. Love
of
Love
XLII. Our Lord Jesus Christ,
XLIV.
"
St.
XLVIII.
XLIX.
Joseph,
Sacrifice of the
Christ,
Mass,
308
.
314 323
..... .... ....
and Courage,
.
.
333 338 342
LIII. Mortification,
347
LIV. Temperance,
352
LV.
357
Chastity,
LVI. Purity of Intention.
.
.
LVII. Conformity to the Will of God, LVIII. Prudence,
"
.
327
LII. Strength
"
293
300
Humility,
LI. Meekness,
"
.
284
Piety,
L. Patience,
"
... ...
Virgin,
XLV. The Holy Angels, XLVI. The Passion of Jesus XLVII. The
"
God,
Our Neighbor,
XLIII. The Blessed
"
of
LIX. Recollection,
LX.
Sanctification of
361
.
365
.... One
s
LXI. Religious Instruction, LXII. Good Works,
.
State, .
.
373 381
388 395
399
vi n
CONTENTS. PAGE
CHAPTER LXIII. The Souls "
LXIV.
LXV. "
LXVI.
in Purgatory,
Preparation for Death,
Care of the Sick, Paradise,
.
.
405
.
.
.
.
.
.412
...
420
430
PREFACE. F
all
the means employed by the Church promotion of piety, particu
for the
youth, there are few more efficacious than/sodalities or confraterni larly
among
Blessed Virgin Mary, y Happy are parishes and educational houses which
ties of the
the
possess fervent and flourishing confraternities,
asylums of perseverance, centres of piety, nur series of good works and holy vocations.
Now, ternity
the fervor and prosperity of a confra
depend
in
a
great
measure on the
If pious instructions given at the meetings. these instructions and conferences are well
chosen, suited to the age, condition, and cir cumstances of the members; if they tend to inspire piety, labor,
them with an enlightened and which includes hatred of sin, \love of v
and
the
constant i
practice
of strong
PREFA CE.
2
Christian virtues, they cannot
admirable
task
important charged therewith to
usetul
only, subjects
few
practical, fruitful
wilt
draw
better ones,
way of giving
than
for
to
who
them
;
in
are
out
to offer a
from which they and which will put tJ;em ideas,
to this kind of exhortation
and weight.
interest
its
must seek
to fudli-
is
those
for
suggest, traced
;
line
all
volume
of this present
this
in the
produce
fruits.
The end tate
to
fail
(
The
reader, then,
for ready- prepared sermons doctrine and substance which
less
the
form the groundwork thereof.^ The matter here
;
it
is
for
the
director
to
is
appropriate
and adapt it to the special wants of his audi tors and clothe it in suitable language. our modest work help to nourish the piety, confirm the virtue and increase the happiness of the happy Children of Mary
May
!
The Children
of
Mary
Ah!
glorious Queen of Heaven, blessed and tender Mother, they !
are thy joy and thy crown.
Consecrated to
thy honor, making open profession of piety by enrolling themselves under the standard of Son, they form a Land of elect in the Thou coverest them with Church militant.
thy
PREFA CE.
3
thy special protection, powerful Virgin leadest
them
to
combat and
to victory
;
if
thou they
are but faithful to thee.
Oh!
that
were given me to inspire them
it
with increased love for their amiable
all
Mo
thernot
a barren love, but a love the fruit
of which
would be inviolable
engagements
have
they
their august sovereign
!
fidelity
toward
contracted
Then
I
to the
would have
assured them a pledge of salvation and in the joys of thy maternal creased, O Mary !
heart.
That
this
holy Virgin
ken it
!
to bless this little
for thy glory.
will
be
may be
happiness
my
If
mine, deign,
O
work underta
thou hearest
my
praver
sweetest consolation before leav
ing this world. My course is almost run; and as the end approaches, among many regrets which I experience before God, one of the
most sorrowful little,
thers!
(3
having loved thee too sweetest and most amiable of mo
But
if
is,
alas!
this
work be pleasing
to thee,
thou deign to bless it, if it bear fruit among thy dear children, I will find in it compensa if
tion for a too barren past
the hour of death.
and consolation
for
SODALITY DIRECTOR
CHAPTER
S
MANUAL,
I.
ORIGIN AND NATURE OF CONFRATERNITIES. Inhabitabo in tabernaculo tuo in
s
mento alarum tuarum ever
;
PSALM
I
(In
Ix. 5.
F
the storm-bound mariner find a port of safety, traversing a hostile
if
is
happy to
the traveller
country rejoices to find a protection against the dangers which him, how much more should the Christian rejoice at finding open to him a safe asylum in the midst of the perils of this world
surround
!
is
This refuge offered us by the divine mercy the sodality or confraternity of the Blessed
Virgin
Happy
Mary.
appreciate
it,
!
It
those
who know and
shines in their eyes as the Queen of Heaven, as her
sanctuary of the dwelling in the midst of men, her blessed taber nacle where the children of this divine
Mother
SODALITY DIRECTOR
6
S
MANUAL.
are happy to dwell under the covert of her wings. In thy tabernacle 1 ska!/- dwdl for ever ; I shall be protected under the covert of thy wings.
What, are
then,
is
its
a confraternity?
And what
?
advantages Considered exteriorly, a confraternity pre sents itself to us as a pious association formed of persons chosen from among the most ex
emplary of a college, school, parish, or city. If we would have a more distinct idea of it, if we would know the nature of a confraternity, the end it proposes, the means it employs, here is
of
a definition of
Mary
is
it
:
A
soda-tity or confraternity
a piou* association, canonically
es
tablished, to help the faithful in the constant pur of good under the special protection of the
suit
Blessed Virgin Mary. ist. It is an association- -that
is,
a reunion
and a accord council directed one by forming body, of persons belonging to a determined class
ing to established rules.
A
2d. pious association. Piety is the proper characteristic which distinguishes sodalities
other societies, whether commercial, recreative, or scientific. Here is the end 3d. To aid the faithful.
from
all
.
.
.
of the confraternity and the object it proposes to itself: tJ aid the faithful in the pursuit of good ; in other words, confraternities are estab lished to give powerful spiritual succor to those
CONFRA TERNITIES.
who wish
7
to continue in the pursuit of good There are many who in virtue.
and to advance
desire to lead a Christian
life,
but they encoun
ter a multitude of obstacles in the world, in their profession, even in their families. They
need
aids,
and these aids are offered them
in
confraternities.
There are some who, animated by noble sen timents, would make their lives a chain of vir tues and good works, an ever-ascending path to heaven they need aid and direction. And this aid and direction are equally offered them in ;
confraternities.
In a college how many young men have the noble desire to protect their future and assure themselves a happy and honorable career! But
they are young, weak, inexperienced and sur rounded by snares and seductions; they need aid
Now
and counsel.
this counsel are offered
Do you consist?
once again
them
this aid
and
in a sodality.
ask what these aids are, in what they all, in the mutual support the
First of
associates afford one another; all animated with the same sentiments- -their union forms their
the exercises of piety per formed in common, and the prayers offered for
strength
;
then, in
the members finally, in the special protec tion of the Blessed Virgin. 4th. Under the protection of the Blessed Virgin.
all
;
The protection of the Blessed Virgin
is
the
SODA LITY DIRE C TOP S MANUAL.
8
principal means of attaining" the end proposed by the confraternity. There is question here
of a most special protection merited by conse crating one s self to the Mother of God and
vowing to her a particular devotion. This de votion and the protection it inevitably secures are a pledge of perseverance and salvation. 5th. Finally, the confraternity is an associa tion
which means
canonicalty established,
it
is
approved, recognized, adopted, erected as a confraternity by the Holy See, whose autho rity is no other than that of God. It
is
God
Church with is
the
way
Himself, then, this in
who endowed
new means
which
it
the
of salvation; here
providentially
came
about In 1563 there lived in Rome, in the Society of Jesus, a young Belgian, born at Liege, named Jean Leon. In the Roman College he
had the lowest grammar-class, where he de voted himself more to forming the hearts than cultivating the minds of his pupils. Convinced that the protection of the Blessed Virgin is a very efficacious means to preserve innocence and to become a perfect Christian, the young professor from time to time assem bled the most fervent of his disciples to exhort them to devotion to Mary and teach them to render themselves worthy of her love. Thev erected an oratory, where they had
general
CONFRA TERNI TIE S.
9
prayers; they had edifying reading; they pro posed to themselves to honor the Mother of God by imitating her virtues and by frequent ing the sacraments.
The fruits which these pious pupils gathered from their reunions, and the odor of virtue which they spread in the college, excited the attention of the rector and the first superior Father Claude Aquaviva, Gene of the order. ral of the Society of Jesus, spoke on the subject Gregory XIII., who then occupied the pa The pope, touched with the happy pal chair. results of these pious reunions, erected them
to
under the title of the An Our Lady, and made the very
into a confraternity
nunciation of
general of the Society of Jesus superior. The bull of erection was given the 5th of December, 1584. It grants to the new confraternity rich in 7
dulgences, and confers upon it the right to affili ate itself with similar associations which should be established in different Jesuit colleges. The
terms of the papal bull erect but one confra ternity alone- -that which exists at Rome in the Church of the Annunciation, enclosed within the walls of the
Roman
College
;
it
was estab
a primary confraternity and placed under the direction of the general of the So lished
as
ciety of Jesus, giving
with
by
it
him
power to affiliate which would thus,
full
other confraternities, be canonically established and
this affiliation,
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
io
enjoy the indulgences granted to the primary confraternity. The bull of
Gregory XIII. referred only
to
the confraternities of students established in
A
few years afterwards Sixtus Jesuit colleges. V., Clement VIII., Gregory XV. extended the favors and privileges with which Gregory XIII. had enriched the sodalities of students to all sodalities of the pious faithful
formed
in
the churches, professed houses, seminaries, and residences belonging to the Society of Jesus or
under their
direction.
Benedict XIV.,
in
his
apostolic letter of the 27th of September, 1748, extols the excellence of these confraternities
and confirms cessors.
the concessions of his prede Finally, Leo XII., by a special re all
script dated March 27, 1825, extended them to men and women, even all confraternities of
those not formed in the churches of the ciety of Jesus or
Such are the
make
So
under their direction. acts of the
sodalities of the Blessed
Holy
See,
which
Virgin a canoni
Church. And since Jesus Christ confirms in heaven what His Vicar binds or loosens upon earth, the sodalities of the cal institution of the
Blessed Virgin are not only established by the Holy See on earth, but recognized, approved and blessed by Jesus Christ in heaven. And as the Mother of our Saviour could have no other sentiments than those of her divine Son, it is
CONFRA TERNITIES.
I 1
evident that a sodality recognized by Jesus Christ is recognized by the Blessed Virgin, who regards it as her own, as a little family
consecrated to her of which she and mother.
is
the protec
tress
Behold what sodalities are. Is there a holier one more worthy of our respect and love? Let us thank God for having given them to His Church; let us thank Him parti cularly for having opened them to us, for hav institution or
ing admitted us among the number of the Chil dren of Mary. Let us love the sodality and ;
that let
we may continue
to love
it
more and more,
us devote ourselves to learning the inestima
ble advantages
it
affords us is.
CHAPTER
.
II.
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION. Venerunt mi hi omnia bona paiiter cum ilia (All good things to me together with her) Wis. vii. n.
came
F you
come to this sanctuary homage to Mary and to sing
are glad to
to offer
her praises, if all that you here see and you hear delights your heart, it is be cause you love the sodality as a holy family dear to the hearts of Jesus and His holy Mo alt
that
Yes, you love
ther.
it,
and you give proofs of
this affection as creditable to
you as they are nevertheless your love is not
pleasing to
God
yet what
should be.
Ah
it
;
how much more you would love this holy association if you knew all the treasures it contained and all the blessings it procures its !
members. These blessings are immense the Sovereign Pontiffs have solemnly and publicly proclaimed them to the whole Church, at the same time ;
urging all the faithful to share in them. At their august word sodalities rapidly spread through all countries, and for three centuries
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION.
13
who have
enrolled themselves in these have found the inestimable advan tages promised them. What, then, are these advantages ? all
those
sodalities
Here
are the principal
:
a special protection
from the Blessed Virgin, a safeguard against the contagion of vice, the pledge of an honora ble and happy life, solid piety, the good choice of a state in life, the sanctification of one s state, numerous indulgences, finally an assemblage of all the blessings which a Christian could desire. i st. First ad vantage- -special protection from Mary. This special protection from the Mo ther of God is assured you, dear sodalists, be cause you have vowed to her a special devo tion.
On
entering her confraternity you enrol
yourself under the standard of the Blessed Vir gin in making your act of consecration at the foot of her altar you devote yourself to her ser ;
you solemnly protest that you are resolved honor and love her, to say nothing, to do nothing, or permit those committed to your charge to say or do anything against her honor
vice,
to always
;
then, in beseeching her to receive you as her servants for ever, you promise her that you will never abandon her and will rermin attached to
her service to the end of your life. On her part Mary, who never allows herself to be outdone in generosity, promises you three great favors intimated in the act of consecra-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
14
tion. First, she receives you among the num ber of her devoted servants, her privileged chil dren your names are written in her heart and your brows are marked with a filial character ;
which distinguishes you Christians
Second, tance in
^uscipe
:
me
in
her eyes from other serviim perpetuum.
Mary promises you all
your
actions,
prises, in all the perils
ter
in
Adsis miki
in
particular assis all your enter
which you may encoun
omnibus actionibus meis. Fi she nally, promises not to abandon you at the hour of death, but to visit you and comfort you in the agony of that supreme moment, and de fend you against the enemy in your last com :
in
Nee me deseras in hora mortis. Such is the special protection assured
bat
:
members
to the
of the sodality justly styled Children
Is it necessary to say that in this is the pledge of salvation spoken of by the doc tors of the Church when they teil us with St.
of Mary.
Anselm
:
Omnis ad
te conversus,
O
Maria,
ct
a
te
respectus, impossibile est ut
pereat ? It is impos any one devoted to Mary to perish. Whoever, then, turns to thee, O Mary and merits to win thy regard will be saved; he can
sible for
!
not perish. 2d.
vice.
Second advantage
Ah
corruption
!
a safeguard against to be preserved from the general
we need some powerful
We are no longer
in the
protection.
happy days of the early
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION.
15
Church, when the multitude of believers, united by the bonds of a perfect charity, all practised Since the enemy virtue with a holy emulation. tares in the field of the Father of the
sowed the
family, charity has grown cold, faith has become rare and piety, isolated in the midst of a wick ed world, is exposed to the greatest dangers.
what shipwrecks, what wanderings frequently without any return Therefore what
falls,
!
not true that everything is a snare, an to virtue and innocence, particularly in enemy ? Within are the passions without are youth the seductions of the world and the allurement of its pleasures, its false principles, the tyranny Is
it
;
human respect, frequently even the turmoil of business, by which cares, temporal we allow ourselves to be carried away at the of fashion and
expense of our soul and its spiritual interests. What a deluge, and what souls perish therein !
But the divine Mercy has prepared holy arks for those yes,
in
who wish
the
to escape these dangers; of the Blessed Virgin
sodalities
her faithful servants find a sure refuge from the scandals, the errors, the temptations which devastate the world. Yes, a sure refuge and most efficacious means To convince you of this it is only necessary to consult experience. Hardly were
of salvation.
known than, to the great joy of the they were established and multiplied
the sodalities faithful,
16
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
everywhere, numbering persons of all ages and conditions, who were the elect of piety and shone by their virtues and good works. For the last three centuries we behold them through out the whole world like parterres of flowers sending forth the good odor of Jesus Christ. a It is incredible," says Benedict XIV. ,* "the advantages which have flowed to men of all ranks from this laudable and pious institution. Some, placed from their infancy under the patronage of the Blessed Virgin, have persevered in a path of innocence and piety, and, continuing without deviation in purity of morals and a life worthy of a Christian man and a servant of Mary, have never ceased to give to the world the most beautiful example and have merited the grace of Others, miserably led away perseverance of the seductions vice, have returned from by to a complete conversion of the path iniquity final
through the assistance of the merciful Mother of God, to whose service they devoted them selves in socialities. They embraced a sober, even life, and, sustained by their pious just, to the religious exercises of these con fidelity fraternities, they persevered to the end in this new life. There are those also who, because of the tender love which they had from their in fancy for Mary, have attained the most eminent degrees of divine charity/ * Bulla aurca, Gloriosae Dominae.
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION. Would you have among- thousands?
a few examples It
was
17
chosen
in sodalities that
Francis of Sales, Blessed Peter Fourrier, St. Stanislaus Kostka, St. Aloysius, Blessed Berchmans laid the foundation of that perfec St.
which they attained through the protec Blessed Virgin Mary. The most distinguished persons considered it an honor tion
tion of the
to be enrolled.
Francis
II.,
Duke
of Lorraine,
example to his subjects and make public profession of his devotion to the Blessed Virgin, wished to be one of the first received
to give an
into the sodality established at Nancy. Charles IV. and Leopold, inheriting their father s piety,
rendered their homage to the Queen of Heaven
same sodality. In 1585 there was estab lished at Louvain, in the house of the Jesuits,
in this
the sodality of the Annunciation of the Bless ed Virgin, which soon included the students
belonging to the various branches of the uni Later there was established in the versity.
Immaculate Con hundred four which counted members, ception, and among them the illustrious Justus Lipsius. This was not sufficient: they were obliged to
same
city the sodality of the
establish as
many
as six sodalities, three Latin
and three Flemish,
for
persons of
all
condi
tions,
Now, why to avail
did the faithful so eagerly hasten themselves of these pious asylums?
1
SODALIT Y DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
8
Was it not because they sought and found in them a safeguard against vice and the corrup tion of the age
?
3d. Third ad vantage- -the pledge of an hon orable and happy life. I have but one life, I will traverse this world but once; I wish to choose the noblest and most beautiful path. This is the thought of every great and noble soul when it has measured with a glance the Like a traveller space of this fleeting life. down from a mountain on the coun looking is he to the true Christian dis traverse, try a thousand roads the tinguishes among royal road which leads to his country, and unhesi This royal road, the tatingly enters therein. road of honor and peace, is that of the Chris tian
traced for us by the
our Loid Jesus Christ.
King of glory, In this beautiful road
Him
through a succession of
life,
has followed after
ages the grand procession of His disciples, the flower and the elite of the human race. Out side this path ness, for there
Only the
I
no greatness or true happi no sanctity or true virtue.
see
is
just, the true Christian shall flourish lie shall grow up like the cedar
like the palm-tree ;
of Libanus.
They that are planted
Lord shall
in the house
of
flourish in the courts of the house of our God. They sJiall still increase in a fruit ful old age, and shall be well treated (Ps. xci. Blessed is the man whose will is in the 13-15). the
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION. name of the Lord ; he
19
shall be like a tree which is
planted near the running waters, which shall bring forth its fruit in due season, and his leaf shall not fall
of
The
(Ps.
i.)
on the contrary, is like dust driv en before the wind, like a barren trunk produc ing only thorns his soul is like an uncultivated sinner,
;
I passed by the field of and the man, by vineyard of the foolish man : and behold it was all filled with nettles, and tliorns h id covered the face thereof, and the stone wall was broken down (Prov xxiv. 30, 31). Such are the images used by Holy Scripture to show us that without virtue we find only shame and misery, while the Christian life is truly honorable and gives to man all the hap field,
a waste^ vineyard
:
the slotJiful
piness he can enjoy here below. Observe that we do not speak here of the fu
ture beatitude
which must be the great reward
of virtue, but of that happiness mingled with The tears which is a foretaste of it on earth. to you, dear sodalists, preserves you in that Christian life
confraternity assures
because
it
it
which is a pledge of it. It brings before your eyes an image of heaven and causes your heart to feel a ray of the angels
joy when, gathered together on festivals, you behold the splendor of the sanctuary and hear the beautiful canti cles of the Church. It is here that later, when
thrown into the vortex of the world, where
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
20
death, in the words of a holy doctor, enters through all the senses, the Child of Mary again finds life and joy. What, then, is sweeter than to take refuge in these happy asylums of virtue which have witnessed the most beautiful years
of our
life
;
to
come
to the feet of the best of
mothers to reanimate our hearts, to renew our good resolutions, and wipe off the world s dust, which attaches itself to even the most perfect souls
!
solid piety. 4th. Fourth advantage Piety, which consists in the worship of God and in
the practices of religion, is all the more pre cious that it is both the root of all virtues and
the principle of
blessings. Godliness, says the apostle, is profitable to all things, having promise of the life tJiat noiv is, and of that wJiich is to
come
(i
Tim.
all
iv.
8).
But
to
produce these
fruits piety must be solid, like a vigorous tree fre which resists the storms and seasons.
We
kind of piety consisting of ten quently derness of heart, assiduity in prayer, but unac companied by a spirit of labor and constant this is a weak and slothful fidelity to duty a like flower which is swept away by the piety, wind or withered by the summer s heat. It must be a solid and at the same time firm, en lightened and active piety, which consists in the inseparable union of prayer and duty. Instruc find a
;
tion,
energy, and a spirit of labor are
its
three
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION. characteristics,
confraternity
is
_-
is
it
made
easy to see that the
to inculcate
them
;
it in-
children in the doctrine of salvation, strengthens them with the sacraments, it nou
structs it
and
21
its
them with the Bread of the strong, which gives them Christian energy and a spirit of rishes
labor.
As to the labor of which we speak, it has a double object- -the works of duty, and, outside these,
works of charity and
zeal,
which the so
dality undertakes or encourages, according to
circumstances. Fifth ad vantage- -the
good choice of a state in life. Every man is destined by Provi dence for a state in life, a career which is suited to him this is what is commonly called voca 5th.
;
tion.
To
Nothing
deceive one
life is
;
as important as this subject. the choice of a state in
to enter a false path, to
future, one tion
is
s self in
to
s
make
compromise one
happiness, and even one a
good choice
is
s
s
salva
to secure one s
happiness in this life and the next. It is evident that he chooses wisely who fol lows the will of God and embraces that career
which Providence destines him. On the to a choose state one is not which for contrary, destined is to make a bad choice and fail in one s vocation. The usual cause of this, alas! too frequent misfortune is misconduct and vice, or a blind passion by which one permits himfor
SODALITY DIRECTOR
22
S
MA NUAL.
Then to avoid falling into be guided. the Christian this abyss shun the paths of sin who remains faithful to God will be guided by sjlf to
;
His paternal hand to the place which is made life where he will find the happiness and peace he desires here be for him, to the state in
Justum deduxit Douiinus per vias rectas. Now, by preserving its members from the tyranny of the passions, by causing them to walk in the path of virtue, by enlightening them on the duties of their different states, by directing them with its counsels, procuring them succor from on high by means of prayer and the sacraments, the sodality guides them surely and safely to the state marked for them. low.
Is
not this an inestimable benefit 6th.
Sixth
ad vantage- -the
?
sanctifi cation
of
one s state. It is not sufficient to have embrac ed a state we must also S uictify it- -that is, ful fil its duties and live in it in a holy and Chris tian manner. To sanctify one s state is to be perfect, be ;
corresponding to the designs What, in fact, does God ask of man in the state in which Providence has placed him, if it be not to sanctify it by the devout fulfilment of the duties attached there to? Is not this what all the saints have done? Whether they lived in the world or in the clois ter, on a throne or in a cottage, have they not
cause
and
it
is
will of
fully
God.
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION.
23
Is it not everywhere sanctified their state ? what St. Joseph did in his workshop at Naza reth, the Blessed Virgin in her humble house, Jesus Christ Himself during- all His life ? He expressly declares it, saying to His Father Fa er, opus consummavi quod dedisti mihi ut fadam--" Father, I have finished the work which Thou gavest me to do (John xvii 4). To sanctify one s state is to lead a life of duty opposed to a life of amusement. Do not think, however, that a life of duty is a gloomy, weari some life devoid of pleasure; those who live but for God and God s good pleasure enjoy the truest pleasure, the sweetest and purest joys, even the most agreeable amusements, for they are animated, as it were, by the presence and :
smile of the divine Master. of this
happy
life in
We
see an
image
the marriage feast of Cana,
where the joy of (he guests was shared by Jesus and His holy Mother. And behold the happiness which the confra ternity procures, for it affords its members the succors best adapted to facilitate the sanctification of their state.
ad vantage- -numerous indul would be superfluous to remind It gences. you of the value of this spiritual largess which the Church gives to the faithful under the name of indulgences, and how useful they are to the /th.
living
Seventh
and the dead.
Now,
the Sovereign Fon-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
24
tiffs,
have en the indulgences which
in their signal love for sodalities,
riched
them with
all
The present volume con piety could desire. I shall only call tains a long list of them. your attention to the plenary indulgence which all the sodalists can gain on days of general re union, and that which is granted them at the
hour of death. 8th. Eighth advantage--a collection of all the blessings which a Christian can desire here below The Saviour shows us a treasure, a root and principle of all blessings, under the imnge
of a pearl of great price which a merchant, He He had to acquire for once
tells us, sold all that
;
he obtains the pearl he possesses in it all treas This pearl of great price, says ures, all riches. St.
Bernard,
is
the religious state- -the state of
him who, by the vows of religion, consecrates himself wholly and irrevocably to God. But we can with good reason apply the words of holy doctor to the confraternity ot the Blessed Virgin, where the faithful devote themselves to the service of God by conse
the
crating themselves to the Virgin Mother of What God. may say with St. Bernnrd
We
is this
pearl of great price,
"
:
if
not the holy and
lives more more rarely, rises more promptly, proceeds more cautiously, reaps more graces, enjoys more peace, possesses a pledge of a hap-
immaculate confraternity where one purely,
falls
ADVANTAGE OF THE CONGREGATION.
25
pier death, of a shorter purgatory, a richer re
ward
in
heaven
?
-Hczc
est religio sancta,
immaculately in qua liomo vivit
pur ins,
pur a,
cadit r fi
rms, surgit vclocius, incedit cautiiis, irroratur fjequentius, quiescit sccurius, moritur fiducialius, pur-
gatur
citius, prczrniatur copiosius.
One
only needs to read each one of these statements to feel how they are verified in the confraternity. They are, moreover, confirmed by experience and facts. How many times have I
heard from the *
myself how
lips of
beautiful
is
others and witnessed the
death of a true
Child of Mary, how consoling and precious it God has even frequently been is before God! to manifest by prodigies how great is pleased for her children when leavsolicitude s Maryj ing this world, and how she helps them to con summate their life by the holiest death.
CHAPTER
III. .
DUTIES OF SODALISTS. disciplinam patris tui, et ne dimittas legem mason, hear the instruction of thy father, and for sake not the law of thy mother). PROV. i. 8.
Audi,
tris tine
fill mi,
(My
F
the sodality affords great advantages also imposes upon those who en
it
joy them a condition, fulfilment of certain duties.
which
the
is
Every man has
special duties, which vary the to soaccording position he occupies. but let us dalist, then, also has duties to fulfil
A
;
hasten to say that they are sweet and agree able.
a still greater thing is a great thing the love and fulfilment of duty. What is duty ? It is all that a servant must
Duty is
do
in
;
obedience to the will and desire of his When you shall have done, says Jesus
master.
Christ, all tJiese t kings tJiat are commanded yon, say: We are unprofitable servants; we have done
we ougJit lo do (Luke xvii. io)--th;it we have done our duty. Now, since God is
that which is,
our Master and we are His servants, His 26
will
D UTIES OF SOD and
all
He
I
LISTS.
27
asks of us according to our state
constitute our duties.
We
understand, then, that duty differs from amusement. Duty is what pleases our Master; amusement is what pleases us--in other words,
duty
is
what
is
necessary,
amusement
is
what
What further is duty ? It is man s will please. reasonable creature needs a rule to rule.
A
Now, the true guide himself with wisdom. rule of conduct, as simple as it is perfect, is, Behold the guiding thread to do one s duty. in the labyrinth of life, the golden line traced by the finger of God. Happy he whose end is duty, and who faithfully follows in His life will be regulated with noble path
for us first
this
!
prudence, happiness will accompany his steps, and his name will be uttered with respect.
Again what is duty ? It is the great basis Whoever ful of the moral perfection of man. nothing to be desired he a noble ambition? Do you aspire to be a perfect sodalist of the You have but one thing to Blessed Virgin ? do devote yourself to the perfect fulfilment his duties leaves
fils
is
perfect.
;
Has your heart
:
of the duties of a
member
of the sodality, of a
Child of Mary.
But what are these duties? First of us repeat what we have already said duties are not onerous.
of her divine
Son,
is
all :
let
these
yoke, like that sweet and her burden
Mary
s
28
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
three things: the obser exemplar} conduct, fidelity to the act of consecration. I. Rules. The rules of the congregation, so light.
It consists of
vance of the
7
rule,
and pious that they seem to have been dictated by the Blessed Virgin herself, were approved by Pope Sixtus V. in his bull Qmnipotentis Dti of the 5th of January, 1586, and given to the primary confraternity of beautiful
Rome,
as well as to
These
all affiliated
which
thereto.
permitted to add local statutes, should be observed with reli gious fidelity; not that they oblige under pain of sin, like the commandments of the Church, but because they are approved by the Holy rules, to
it
is
See, are pleasing to the Blessed Virgin, and form the basis of the sodality and the princi Moreover, in ple of its life and prosperity. entering this pious association one explicitly binds himself to observe its statutes and rules. One is bound, then, to observe these holy rules through a principle of honor and fidelity, through love for the Blessed Virgin, and
through love for the confraternity. As to the rules themselves, they may be summed up in certain prescribed duties: ist, towards God
and the Blessed Virgin 2d, towards the con jd, towards one s self; 4th, towards fraternity one s neighbor. ist. Towards God and the Blessed Virgin ;
;
DUTIES CF SODA LISTS.
29
the rules prescribe daily prayers, Mass, the frequentation of the sacraments, and faithful
attendance at the meeting s.
Towards the
2d.
sodality
:
you must love
it,
honor; love all its mem prosperity, bers with a sincere and fraternal affection, hav ing at heart the union and concord of all; mani fest love and particular regard for its officers. This charity should be manifested by deeds, and even by sacrifices, particularly when fel love
its
its
low-members are ill or die. Our duties towards 3d. Towards one s self. require that our conduct should be and exemplary; that we should avoid edifying worldly companions, reprehensible amusements, dangerous or doubtful books. We must ear 4th. Towards our neighbor. nestly aid and share in the works of charity and zeal which circumstances require. This is a summary of the sodality rules, which you will read entire in your Manual
ourselves
with the greatest profit. II. Exemplary conduct. apply this term not to a simply regular, Christian, irreproach
We
life, but to a life which impresses others by the splendor of a regularity worthy to serve as an example. Such should be Children of
able
Mary
s lives.
The Blessed Virgin
tells
them
So let your all, as Jesus Christ did His apostles shine that men see light before they may your good :
SODALITY DIRECTOR
30
S
MANUAL.
works, and glorify your Fatlier who is in heaven. Therefore they must serve as an example to their neighbor by their punctuality, their chari ty, their patience, their modesty, and their re serve in their words. And why should the conduct of socialists be
edifying? Because the sanctity of Mary, whose children they are, and the honor ot the sodality of which they are members, make it for them. an obligation The misconduct of a o child grieves a mother; its virtue rejoices and so
honors her.
Does
this
society
shall
mean be
that
free
all
from
upon entering the faults
or shall at
once become models of virtue? Such is not our idea but the perfection of which we speak is the end which each one should endeavor to ;
attain.
The III. Fidelity to the act of consecration. act of consecration, dear socialists, is an engage ment
of
honor which you have contracted
at
the foot of the altar in the presence of the an gels and all the members of the confraternity.
In begging the Virgin
Mary
to be
your pro you promised on your part that you would henceforth honor her as your mother, and that you would never say a word or be guilty of an action against her tectress in
life
and
in death
This engagement contains a triple pro mise, which it is well you should thoroughly
honor.
DUTIES OF SO DA LISTS. understand it is
in
order to
fulfil it
31
Here
perfectly.
:
To
ist.
ever preserve a
filial
love for
Mary
which impels you to frequently invoke her and avoid all that could displease her, accord ing to the words of St. Bernard In your perils, :
your
trials,
voke
Mary ;
lie art
your let
vv aver ings,
the
and on your
think of Mary, in
name of Mary lips ;
be ever in
but to merit
your
Jier interces
sion do not fail to imitate her example.
2d. To utter no word against her honor such are too free, unbecoming words, unworthy of a Child of Mary. ;
To
be guilty of no actions against her honor such are culpable actions, particularly those which tend to tarnish the splendor of the virtue dearest to her virgin heart. Chil 3d.
;
dren of Mary, behold your noble and glorious Your good Mother will not fail to assist you in fulfilling them, and in the faithful duties!
accomplishment of them you will enjoy all the advantages which the confraternity promises. Hoc fac et vives This do and thou shalt live
(Luke
x. 28).
CHAPTER
IV.
HAPPINESS OF THE FAITHFUL SODALIST. Si JKZC
scitis,
beati eritis^ si fiteritis ea (If
things you shall be blessed
you do them).
if
you know these
JOHN
xiii. 17.
fjAPPINESS! Behold the perpetual as We de piration of the human heart! sire
we is
it
even
in this fleeting
life.
Can
Is there happiness on earth? Perfect happiness, which is called beatitude, it is the portion of only found in heaven
attain it?
;
the elect; but there
is
upon earth an imperfect
happiness which Jesus Christ has revealed to us, and which is no less true happiness for be Whose ing mingled with the cross and tears.
happiness? All true Christians share it, and, consoling thought, the Children of Mary have the largest share. Yes, the largest portion of. true happiness in this world is re served to faithful sodalists. What are the ele is
this
in
ments of
this
happiness?
Here are
the five principal: the sweetness of piety, a good conscience, the satisfaction of ac complished duty, consolation in adversity, the
pledge of a happy death. 32
HAPPINESS OF THE FAITHFUL SODA LIST. ist.
The sweetness
of piety.
Piety
is
33
a hid
den manna which causes the soul to taste all We understand by piety that gift sweetness. of the Holy Spirit which not only floods the mind with the light of faith but warms the heart with the fire of love from above. Then we love Jesus and His holy Mother; we love to refresh ourselves at the divine fountains of
the sacraments and prayer. Oh how sweet is the interior converse of a soul which prays, which has the happiness of speaking with Jesus !
and Mary.
How
enrapturing are the canticles
of the sanctuary in those delightful moment3 spent at the foot of the altar! Then we may exclaim with David How lovely are 7hy taber Blessed are they nacles, O Lord of Hosts / :
.
that dwell in
Thy
day
in 1 hy courts
cles
of sinners
house,
.
.
O Lord !
Better
above thousands in
tlie
is
one
taberna
(Ps. Ixxxiii.)
We
A
understand by good conscience. is pure of all mortal that one conscience good sin, which reproaches us with no grave fault and bears testimony that we are the friends and children of God. Nothing is sweeter than this 2d.
a
testimony of a good conscience it fills the soul with a serenity, calmness, and peace which sur A secure mind is pass all exterior enjoyments. like a continual feast (Prov. xv. 15), truly says the proverb. Contentment is better than riches ; yes, it ;
surpasses
all
treasures,
all
honors,
all
the inebri-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
34
ating pleasures of the world. No, no; fortune and opulence do not give happiness: witness Solomon, who found in them but vanity and af fliction of spirit, (Eccles
man who
rich
Witness the wicked
ii.)
lived but to feast, and
who
reject
behold him overwhelmed with eter Wit nal shame and buried in hell (Luke xv.) ness still the young Polonais, who, in the midst
ed the poor
;
of every worldly advantage, is so overwhelmed with ennui that he finds life an unbearable bur den; he thought, alas! to rid himself of it by suicide.
No, no; happiness
out, nor does is
it lie
the heart and
Non
its
is
not from with
in exterior blessings
its
:
seat
source a good conscience.
inipiis (Isaias Ivii. 21).
pax The satisfaction
est
of accomplished duty. as the sweet so feeling in the heart Nothing of a Christian when he can say with the divine 3d.
is
Master: Father, I have finished the work which Thou gavest me to do (John xvii. 4). How happy How one is at evening after a well-spent day happy we shall be in the decline of life, when, looking back upon our days, we shall see that they have been full of merit for heaven Whatever men may say or do against us, whatever happen us, we are happy if to soul and conscience we can say I have done what I ought 1 have done my duty. Is it not from this source that the happiness of Christian families flows? We understand by !
!
:
;
HAPPINESS OF THE FAITHFUL SODALIST.
35
m
a truly Christian family one fulfils his duties before
ber
where each
God
mem
in a spirit of
the father and
mother govern good example the chil dren obey their parents and love one another. A spirit of union, peace, industry, and joy reign among them. Nowhere do they find a happi ness equal to that in their home. Therefore all without exception, parents and children, love faith
and love
the household and give
;
find themselves gathered together in the midst of the family it is there and not abroad, at the fireside and not in worldly excursions, theatres, strange drawing-rooms, that they taste those innocent and pure joys of which the prin ciple is none other than the Christian fulfilment
to
;
of duty. since every faithful sodalist is necessa to his duty, since he is^a man of devoted rily and of pleasureNwith this maxim as his not duty
Now,
necessary before the useful, the useful the follows that he cannot
own,\77^ before fail
agreeable^i
to enjoy these sweet satisfactions.
4th. Consolation in trials.
No one^m
this life
escapes the law of sufferingpand the sodalist, like every one else,^has. his cross to bear); but it is lightened by great consolations. Whatever may be the cause of his trials, whether it be reverse of
fortune, wrongs, humiliations, loss of kin dred, a fault into which he has fallen, interior
struggles,
corporal
infirmities,
or any other
SODALITY DIRL CTOR S MANUAL.
36
form of adversity, he has friends who console him and sustain his courage. Who are these friends?
are the brother
They
members
of the
sodality, the director of the sodality, the Blessed Virgin herself, and her divine Son. They are
who
will not abandon him in ad address himself with confi can versity! dence to them they will hold forth a helping hand to him, or they will at least reanimate him with the consoling words, Have confi dence! To them that love God all tilings ^vork to
true friends,
He
;
gether unto good. ^ After the night comes the day, after the storm comes the calm, after trial peace
and joy. of a happy death. Of all the which God grants to men, the most ex ^graces without doubt, is a happy death: Precellent, tiosa in conspectu Domini mors sanctorum ejus 5th.
The pledge
(Ps. cxv.) ) It
is
trance to glory.
the gate of paradise, the en This grace is assured to the
faithful sodalist.
Who can doubt that Mary hears this prayer which her children repeat in the act of conse cration Assist me in all my actions, and abandon me not at the hour of my death ; and this other which we constantly address to her all our lives Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners noiv and at the hour of our death f Think you it is possible that a Mother so full .
:
:
of solicitude for her children during
life
could
HAPPINESS OF THE FAITHFUL SO DA LIST.
37
hour of death ? She helps sickness with resignation, to worthily receive the sacraments, to make to God the very meritorious sacrifice of life, to
forget
them
them
to accept
at the
gain the plenary indulgence, and to leave this
world purified, as far as and acquitted of
stain,
it
all
possible, from all debt to the divine
is
justice.
Hence the
and edifying deaths of which all who have wit
beautiful
Children of Mary nessed them can testify. Courage, then, Children of to
be faithful contracted have you towards your good Mother and rely upon her the death of her chil for your happy death
Mary
;
to the holy obligations
;
dren cannot but be precious in the sight of the Lord. Pretiosa in conspectu Domini mors sanc torum fjus. Behold the happiness reserved to faithful soShould we not earnestly endeavor to dalists merit it ? !
CHAPTER
V.
THE CHRISTIAN
LIFE.
Si vos manseritis in sermone meo, vere discipuli mei er it-is (If
you continue
JOHN
in
my word you
shall
be
my
disciples indeed).
viii. 31.
HE
great end of the sodality is to strengthen and perfect its members in the Christian life.
To
appreciate the beauty, the grandeur, the sovereign usefulness of this end it is necessary to form a just idea of the Christian life, and to consider it in its true light without prejudice or
misapprehension.
What
is
the Christian life?
practicable and easy I.
What
is
How
is
it
made
?
the Christian
When we
life ?
turn
our eyes to various parts of the globe we be hold a great number of people distinguished from others by holy baptism and the sign of
These are Christians the majority of them are subject to the Roman Pontiff; these are Catholics, who form the true Church of the cross.
;
Jesus Christ.
But
in this
holy Church 33
I
observe two classes
THE CHRISTIAN
LIFE.
39
very distinct one from the othergood Cath and bad Catholics. These last are care
olics
less of the duties
tism
;
imposed upon them bv bap
the others lead a truly Christian
life, fulfil
their duties, live according to their belief, are faithful to their baptismal obligations.
In fact, the Christian
practising what
is
lite
and
and is what baptism,
consists in doing
promised
in
the gospel, what is prescribed by the commandments of God and the Church.
taught
in
It is one thing to lead a Christian life and another to bear the name of Christian. All
who are baptized are called Christians, but those only lead a Christian life who fulfil what they promised in baptism- -namely, to follow the law of Jesus Christ and ever to fly those
His capital enemy, the and pomps.
Nor lief
is the Christian or Christian faith
devil,
and
all
his
works
the same thing as be there are so many who
life ;
believe but do not live
up
To
to their faith.
what one be conduct and morals ac
live a Christian life is to practise lieves, to regulate
one
s
cording to the teachings of faith. The Christian life is opposed to a worldly life. The latter follows no other rule but the caprice of passion, of fashion, the allurements of the world, and the demands of selfishness. The rule of the Christian
posed of the
life,
on the contrary,
is
com
maxims of the Gospel, the law
of
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
40
God, duty, conscience, the will of God and His good pleasure it is not a life of egotism, but a ;
of charity.
life
What more tian
ous
life
is
on earth
life
life ? The Chris a preparation for the glori Through the grace of God
the Christian is
of heaven.
and the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ we are destined for eternal glory, to enter the dwelling King of kings, to take our place among the princes of the heavenly court. But to at
of the
tain this
new and sublime
paration which
shall
state
change
we need us,
a pre
so to speak,
This preparation is the heavenly men. Christian life. Jesus Christ came upon earth to teach this life to those who wish to attain heaven. Placed in the midst of the world, where he perpetually abides like a sun to en
into
lighten the
ven
is
race, He tells us all: Hea to you, but to enter you must lead
human
open worthy of heaven. Look upon me. I am the heavenly model; follow my example, ob serve my law, and having become, like me, hea venly men, you shall be worthy to be admitted into the kingdom of heaven. The Christian life,
a
life
a preparation for heaven. of the Christian life, moreover, is of whom His true disciples are Christ, Jesus faithful imitations. To see the Christian life in
then,
is
The type
splendor we must turn our eyes to the apostles, the martyrs, the confessors, and all all
its
THE CHRISTIAN
LIFE.
41
true Catholics who, from apostolic times to the present day, have made open profession of their
holy religion. true Christians
Look
at this brilliant cortege of
they belong to
;
ciety and to all conditions of elect of the human race.
The
Christian
beautiful
life is
all
life;
ranks of so they are the
the most honorable and
justly compared to the pas a of star whose sage path is marked but by The the path of light. just, says the Holy Spi as a rit, shining light, goeth forwards and increasetheven to perfect day (Prov. iv. 18). The life of the sinner, on the contrary, is darksome and life
;
it is
it but dirt and smoke. one life, must we not spend it in but Having the most beautiful path? Now, the most beau tiful path is the Christian life. The Christian life makes men happy in spite of the crosses they have to bear: / exceedingly abound with joy in ail cur tribulation, said the
leaves after
apostle (2 Cor. vii. 4). Good Christians are hap py because their conscience is at peace, because
they receive their trials from the hand of God and they convert them into merit for heaven. Blessed are the un defiled wJio walk in the way of the Lord, says the
The
Christian
prophet (Ps. cxviii. i). life forms and tempers
the so beautiful as a strong, esteem it, we noble, generous character. love it and confide in it What, then, gives character.
Nothing
is
We
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
42
man
this
What
character?
beautiful
him the great virtues of which probity,
courage,
towards
his
teaches
formed generosity even
devotion,
it- is
enemies?
Is it not the spirit of the Gospel ? Give, says the Saviour, to him tliat asketk of thee. Fear ye not them that kill the body and are not able to kill the soul ; but ratJier fear
him that can destroy
both soul
and body
in hell.
Love your enemies, pray for them that persecute and calumniate you. Filled with this spirit, the apostles went from the presence of the council re joicing that they were accounted worthy to suffer
What greatness reproach for the name of Jesus. of soul! Contrast this with worldlings plunged in sensuality,
abandoned
to egotism, slaves of
opinion, slaves of human respect; compare their character with that of true Christians :
on one side you see but cowardice and base ness, while on the other shine nobility of soul, courage, and a generosity which inspires re spect and love.
The
Christian
cessity.
life,
finally, is
If thou wilt enter
an absolute ne says the
into life,
Saviour, keep the commandments (Matt. xix. 17). It is not sufficient to believe; we must also Faith is necessary as the root, and practise. as the fruits which God requires of us. true that Jesus Christ has said, He that
works It
is
and is baptized shall be saved, but we must here understand an efficacious faith, fruit-
believe th
ful in
THE CHRISTIAN
LIFE.
He
tells
Elsewhere
works.
43
us:
He
that
doth the will of my Father ^vho is in heaven, he shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; and
every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit shall be
down and
cut
cast into
the fire (Matt.
vii.
19, 21).
Such
is
such also II.
tiful
the necessity of the Christian its sovereign excellence.
life
;
is
Practice.
If
and desirable,
the is
it
life is beau the other hand, on not,
Christian
very difficult? Does it not require great efforts and great sacrifices? To live a Christian life is it not necessary to triumph over our pas sions, our repugnances, the tyranny of human Has not respect, the seductions of the world ? the Saviour said, The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent bear it azuay ? Yes, our Saviour spoke thus, and He even said that this triumph was humanly impossible for one day He said to His disciples Children, how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter ;
:
kingdom of God ! It is easier for a camel pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom, of God. The dis ciples, impressed by these words, said to one another: Who, then, can be saved? And Jesus, looking on them, saith : With men it is impossible ; into the
to
but not with God, for all things are possible witJi
God (Mark Then it
x.
24-27).
is
impossible for
man
of himself to
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
44
faithfully
fulfil
the duties which the Gospel
temptation, overcoming concupiscence, practising chas tity, forgiving injuries, praying for one s ene mies, are acts which are frequently beyond
imposes.
Resisting
anger,
pride,
But God offers him natural strength. succor, through which all becomes supernatural
man
s
practicable and easy. This divine succor
is
called
grace, actual
grace, the necessity and power of which it is important to well understand. Without grace
we can do nothing we can do all things.
for salvation
I can do
with grace
;
Htm
all things in
How
ivho strengtheneth me, says the apostle. did the saints practise their heroic virtues?
How
did the martyrs win their admirable vic How do so many contemporary Chris
tories? tians
follow
unfalteringly
means of grace. The grace of God,
after
then,
how
but necessary obtain grace two
is
To
By
Jesus? ;
is it to be obtained? conditions are necessary ist, to avoid placing any obstacles to it 2d, to employ the means :
;
God
gives us. The obstacles to grace are the occasions of sin to which we voluntarily expose ourselves, or certain sensual satisfactions to which we are ist.
too
much attached. The means are prayer and
2d.
ments
true divine sources
the sacra
whence we may
THE CHRISTIAN draw grace
after
the
LIFE.
example
45
of
all
the
saints. It is
of
God
thus to
we become
strong- with the strength fulfil duties,
triumph over enemies, to
to practise all the virtues of the Christian life in order to win the palm and crown which are its
reward.
CHAPTER
VI.
SOLID VIRTUE. Assimilabitur viro sapienti, qui cedijicavit dormim siiam supra petravi (He shall be likened to a wise upon a rock). MATT. vii. 24
man
that built his
house
E have
the happiness, dear sodalists, to love virtue, to appreciate it, and to be
won by its beauty
;
therefore
we
desire
our hearts more and more with so great a blessing. But if we would realize this holy desire we must aim at true and solid
to enrich
virtue.
Too frequently we see weak and wavering virtue which, like a house built upon the sand, crumbles under the first shock of temptation. want solid virtue which, like a house built
We
upon
By
a rock, resists the waves and the storms. solid virtue we understand that which
overcomes temptations, endures veres in labor.
A Roman
trials,
perse
hero one day said
to his enemies, astonished at his strength of soul Facer e et pati fortia Romaninn est-- It be :
longs to a Roman to act and suffer with cou Solid virtue realizes these words, but rage. 46
SOLID VIRTUE. realizes
them
we can
say in
virtue to act
far better
it
belongs to Christian
and suffer with
invincible constancy. principles of this solidity
What are the What are the signs tue
than pagan heroes, and
truth
all
47
?
or characters of solid vir
?
An edifice, to be Principles of solidity. solid, must have a firm foundation, immova ble columns; a tree, to resist the winds, must I.
have deep roots.
This foundation and these
roots are the principles of solidity. True vir tue has similar principles, which are: faith, ha
tred of sin, humility, confidence in
God, and
prayer. st. Faith. The holy Council of Trent, speak ing of faith, says that it is the root and founda tion of justification, consequently of the Chris tian life and virtue. St. Paul recommends the i
Colossians to continue grounded, and settled, and immovable in the faith In fide fuudati et :
stabiles (Col.
i.
23).
To
thus serve as a foundation faith should be It should be as firm as that of lively and firm. the apostles. Think what must have been the fiith of those
who had
men who had
seen Jesus Christ,
Him
powerful in word and deed Son of God, who saw Him risen from the dead, who saw Him ascend into hea ven how firm must have been their faith Cer like the
seen
true
!
;
tainly
it
surpassed
in
firmness
all
other
faith,
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
48
even that which we have of the existence of Rome. Therefore see how they speak to the faithful: Believe firmly, brethren, they tell them, for we declare unto yozt t licit which we have heard) winch we have seen witli our eyes, and our hands have handled (i John i. i). We have not followed cunningly devised fables when we made to you the power and presence of our Lord
known
Jesus Christ but having been made eye-witness of This is the vic (2 Peter i. 16). ,
His majesty
tory which cTiJercometh, our faith
(i
John
v. 4).
Yes, when we believe in a hell, in a heaven, in the inestimable rewards of a future life, and we are penetrated with this faith, oh then we are powerful to despise the world and triumph !
over
it.
Faith should be firm
should also be lively. we see the things of faith not in the vague distance, but near, with a clear vision. Now, this clear, luminous, and I
;
it
understand by this that
by Christian instruction, and the attentive consideration by good reading of the truths which God has revealed to us. This lively and firm faith constitutes the first lively faith is acquired
principle of the solidity of virtue. 2d. The second consists in hatred of sin.
We
speak particularly of mortal sin, and we say that a supreme horror of it is necessary, so that whatever be proposed to us, if it imply a mor tal sin, it is a proposition rejected in advance,
SOLID VIRTUE.
49
and one which admits neither examination nor
To propose
discussion. sin
mortally
into a fiery furnace.
instantly
tue
;
and
ing that
it?
reject
this hatred it
we
him to cast himself Can he in reason fail to This supreme aversion,
a principle of solid vir because it is too frequently lack
of sin, is
to a Christian that he
to invite
is
is
see so
many
sad
falls.
The Holy
Spirit gives us to understand this when he tells T/ie fear of the Lord is the beginning of wis us dom (Ps. ex. 10). By fear of the Lord is meant :
It is the beginning the fear of offending God. and of all Christian and foundation of wisdom
virtue.
Third principle of solidity Christian hu The saints and doctors present us hu mility. as the second foundation of the Christian mility 3d.
Faith, they tell us,
life.
is
the foundation-stone
which must sustain the
edifice; but humility penetrates into the depths of the earth until it reaches the firm ground upon which the founda
tion
must be
He who
laid.
humbles himself
builds solidly, and the edifice of his virtue will reach the skies He that shall humble himself shall be exalted (Mz\t. xxiii. 12). St. Peter gives :
us the reason of this sist eth
grace
(i
Peter
when he
but to the
t
tells
humble
us:
He
God
re
givcth
v. 5).
Fourth principle of solidity confidence God. We are of ourselves so weak in vir-
4th. in
the proud,
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
50
.
tuc that, abandoned to our own strength, we fail the reed, bending before
could not but
;
an image of our strength. But it the hand of God touch us, our weakness will be turned into strength and the reed will be come a column. Without me, says our Sa it can and do viour, y nothing (John xv. 5) St. Paul / have labored more abundantly tJum they ; yet not /, but the grace of God with me (i Cor. xv. 10). I can do all things in Him who Juliet h me. strengt
every wind,
is
;
:
Now, we
obtain this helping grace,
we borrow
this strength of God, by a constant and confidence in His merciful assistance. th.it
trust in the
Lord
filial
They
Mount Sion ;
shall be as
they shall not be moved. This confidence, besides securing us the assistance of God, preserves us
from discouragement, the too frequent prelude to falls and defections.
The
5th. Fifth principle of stability- -prayer.
holy exercise of prayer is the complement of confidence and its natural expression. When look upon God as our protector and sup port we implore Him in all our needs and, our needs being continual, our prayer must be con tinual. Hence our Saviour s law We outfit al-
we
;
:
-~
>
Watch ye, and pray, ways pray (Luke He tells us elsewhere, that ye enter not into temp tation (Matt. xxvi. 41). A Christian without prayer is like a soldier without arms on the day to
xviii. i).
SOLID VIRTUE.
51
of battle by prayer he covers himself with the armor of God. Therefore whoever is not as ;
siduous in prayer will be constantly exposed to spiritual dangers, while he who has a spirit of prayer cannot perish.
These are the principles which produce and sustain solid virtue. II.
Characteristics of solid virtue.
The char
by which we recognize solid virtue, the signs which manifest this solidity, are pa tience, contempt of human respect, a spirit of sacrifice, generosity in overcoming one s self, constancy in good. ist. Patience. Feeble virtue, encountering contradictions, whether they come from persons or things, breaks out into complaints and mur murs, becomes discouraged, and frequently for We see men, on the gets itself completely. acteristics
-
contrary, enduring every thing- -not only slight offences, failings, want of regard, but injuries,
calumnies, the greatest outrages without re criminating or uttering a complaint. In the. longest and most painful illnesses you would say they were without pain, so superior are they to
Behold the patience which is an evident sign of solid virtue. The pati nt man, says Holy Scripture, is better than the valiant, their trials.
and he that
ruletli his spirit
cities
(Prov. xvi.
2d.
Contempt
than
lie
that iaketli
32).
of
human
respect.
If
it
be an
SO DA LIT Y DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
52
bend under the yoke of hu an act of courage to trample respect, True virtue founded upon deep it under foot. convictions lias no other rule of conduct but the law of the Sovereign Master, of which it never The true Christian, with his eyes loses sight.
act of cowardice to
man
it is
upon this Supreme Majesty who has drawn the universe out of nothing, and before whom all men are but dust and ashes, knows not what it is to fear or feel the least shame in
fixed
obeying
We
;
and he says with the apostles
cuglit to obey
We
29).
seen
Him
God
cannot but speak the
and heard (Acts
3d.
A
here by
:
men (Acts v. which we have things
rather than
iv. 2c).
We
understand spirit of sacrifice. sacrifice depriving ourselves of some
thing which costs us, God or our neighbor.
thai;
It
we may give is
a sacrifice
it
to
when
we encroach upon
necessities to give to good when we works; give our strength, our time, our means; when we deprive ourselves of rest,
of an amusement, of a lawful satisfaction, for the cause of virtue. distinguish sacrifices of free choice and necessary sacrifices- -that is,
We
those which circumstances, or rather
G^d Him
sometimes impose on us, and which, ac cepted with love, are most meritorious. The one and the other are the effects, the manifesta self,
tions of solid virtue. 4th.
Generosity
in
overcoming one
s self.
The
SOLID VIRTUE. grand maxim of one s seli Vince
St. Ignatius
53
was
to
overcome
ipsum. Overcoming one s one s repugnance when there conquering a duty to be fulfilled, a virtue to practise. te
self is is
There are some who are
pious, faithful to their as as they experience any attrac duties, long but let never so little weariness arise, let tion ;
there be repugnances to overcome, they yield and fall back. Such is not the conduct of solid Christians
;
it
is
sufficient for
them
to recog
nize a duty, an action in accordance with God s will, for them to be inflamed with a noble ardor
and to exclaim
:
God
I must overcome name ! Do what is
zvtlls it !
myself ! Forward, in Goct right, come what may !
9
s
Constancy. There are men who begin achieve nothing; they are frivolous minds which our Saviour signalled in the para Some of the seed. He says, ble of the sower. had not much fell upon stony ground where earth, and it sprang up immediately because it had no deepness of earth, but when the sun cnme it withered away because it had no root. Such is he who henrs the word of God and re ceives it at first with joy but as it has no root in his heart he only perseveres for a time; in the day of tribulation he fails. When, on the contrary, virtue is solid and 5th.
much and
it,
;
plunges it
its
roots into the depths of the soul,
gives perseverance and constancy.
Before
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
54
beginning- the true
Christian reflects, raising he has recogniz
eyes to God, and when ed the div ine will he begins his
and continues the and If enterprise, nothing can arrest him. his success does not correspond to his efforts, if he stumble in the way, he rises undaunted and continues what he knows to be pleasing to God s will, remembering these words: He who perseveres to the end sJiall be saved. Such are the principles and signs of solid r
virtue.
May we
strengthen it more and more in our This happiness will be ours if we zeal ously endeavor to acquire it under the protec tion of the Blessed Virgin Mary, our Mother. hearts!
CHAPTER
VII. .
CAUSES OF DEFECTION. Multi discipulorum ejus abierunt retro (After this many of went back, and walked no more with him).-
his disciples
JOHN
vi. 67.
NE
of the saddest spectacles, in the eyes is the defection of so many
of faith
faithful who, after having walked un der the standard of Christ, cowardly forsake it and adopt that of the world and the devil. No thing grieves the Heart of God more than to see the perfidy of Judas thus renewed nothing is also more unfortunate than the fate of him who thus imitates Judas by selling his divine Master to His enemies. To preserve ourselves from such a misfor tune let us consider the causes of these deplo ;
distinguish three principal abandoning piety, rashness in exposing
rable defections.
causes
one
s self
I.
I
to temptation, dissipation.
Abandoning
piety.
We
here understand
by piety the exercises and practices of Chris tian piety, particularly those prescribed
rules
of the
by the
sodality- -namely, daily prayers, 55
SODALITY DIRECTOR
56
S
MA NUAL.
the sacraments of Penance and the Eucharist, the word of God, and pious reading.
As long as we are faithful to these exercises we will not fall, or if we do fall we will quickly But as soon as one abandons them he deserts his standard and falls into the power
rise again.
This
of the enemy.
is
not a simple
fall
:
it
is
a desertion.
Then can
these practices be essential to the Christian life? Is it not sufficient to observe the
commandments, to hear Mass on Sunday, Holy Communion at Easter? That
to receive is
sufficient
to strictly
fulfil
the
laws of the
Church, but usually it does not suffice to en able one to live a Christian life. Those who confine themselves to acts of strict obligation
commonly state,
into mortal sin, continue in this
fall
and end by throwing
off
even these
last
Here is the reason restraints of religion. The practices of which we speak are the :
food of the soul
nourishment
it
prived of food, assaults of the
if you deprive the soul of weakened like the body de becomes incapable to resist the ;
is
enemy,
to
fulfil
its
duties,
to
When the disci path of virtue. asked our Lord 10 dismiss the multitude ples which had followed Him into the desert, Jesus walk
in the
answered If I shall soul 1hcm away fasting to tJicir home they zev // faint in die way (Mark :
viii. 3).
Ah
!
it
so
many
souls faint in the
way
CA USES OF DEFECTION. of virtue
it
is
57
because they are weak for want
of food.
What would happen to a lamp if we neglect ed to replenish the oil ? to a fire if we did not feed it with wood ? to a clock, no matter how perfect
its
The lamp
organization, if we forgot to wind it ? and the fire would be extinguished,
It is the same with the clock would soon stop. a man s soul when he abandons piety, only the
consequences are more serious. Nothing, then, is more dangerous than to abandon pious practices that is why the de vil makes every effort to lead us to this aban donment. To succeed better he begins by deg?-ees and induces us, for various pretexts, to omit something from time to time, then a lit ;
tle more for slighter reasons, until we fall into a habit of dispensing ourselves and we end by abandoning all. Ah be on your guard against !
this snare; let us
with inviolable II.
Rashness
hold to our pious practices
fidelity. in exposing
He
ourselves to danger.
that hvetk danger says the shall p risk in it (Ecclus. iii. 27).
of which there
Holy Spirit, The danger is here question commonly ,
is
called occasions of sin, which consist in exte rior circumstances, persons, or things which of
themselves or because of our weakness lead us into mortal sin. When I fall into mortal sin, or almost time, every every time, that I find my-
SODALITY DIRECTOR
58 self in
what
is
S
MANUAL.
certain circumstances, there is for me called a proximate occasion of mortal
such circumstances. To expose one s self danger is a mortal sin of itself; to re fuse to fly such a danger is to have neither re pentance nor firm purpose of amendment, and
sin in
to such a
to be incapable of receiving absolution for sin. The most frequent occasions of sin at the pre sent day are bad reading, the theatre, dances,
companions, unbecoming discourse. young people have been ship How many unfor wrecked on these shoals tunate souls have glided into corruption and unbelief for having approached the border of worldly
How many
!
this abyss, the occasion of sin
Then we must any
cost, at
any
!
dangerous occasions at If thy hand scandal
fly
sacrifice.
says our Saviour, cut it off; it is better to thee enter life maimed than having tivo hands for
ize thee,
to
go
into hell, into unquenchable fire
And do not say: am strong enough
I
(Mark
ix. 42).
have nothing to fear;
to
resist
;
I
will
not
I
fall
Once the danger is proved, once your again. confessor, pointing it out to you, has shown you your duty, it is an illusion to think that you can expose yourself to it with impunity. As I will well say go into the fire, but I will not I will sleep in the allow myself to be burned den of the lion, but I will not let him devour me. Experience too fully proves the infallible :
;
CA USE S OF
words of the Holy shall per isJi in
Then
it
DEFE C TION.
Spirit
(Ecclus.
He
:
iii.
59
that loveth danger
27).
danger it is the true Christian pru dence, which may be regarded as a pledge cf For if the rash man who loves dan salvation. fly
;
ger shall perish in it, the prudent man who flies danger shall not perish. It was this principle which prompted a servant of God to make this Would you, he asks, escape significant reply the dangers of the world and save your soul? :
Firstly, fly secondly, fly thirdly, fly. Flying danger, you shall not perish. III. Dissipation. third cause of defection ;
;
A
and spiritual ruin the
name
We
here give dissipation. in to that state which a dissipation is
soul permits itself to be absorbed affairs,
worldly cares, news, and
by worldly all
exterior
things to the point of neglecting its religious duties and failing to reflect upon eternal things.
The absence of reflection is fatal to souls. With desolation is all the land made desolate, says the prophet, because there is none that consider et/i in tlie heart (Jer. xii. n). Oh! if we were to
think on death, on eternity, on the nothingness If we were to think of of all that is not God. the terrible chastisements reserved for sin
!
If
our eyes we would see, like Damocles, a sword suspended over our heads, and we would hasten to make our safety cer tain but because w e no longer raise our eyes
we were
to raise
r
;
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
60
we do
not see the danger, which, alas
!
is
no
less
imminent.
The salutary reflection of which we speak consists in hearing the word of God, in pious reading- -particularly reflective reading- -medi tation, in daily examination of conscience, in making a preparation for death from time to
time in obedience to our Saviour,
who
tells
us:
ready, for at what liour you think not the Son of man will come.
Be ye
One his
will say, perhaps, that he cannot apply This is a mistake. to pious reflection.
mind
Reflection,
though
difficult, particularly for
one
who
allows his senses perfect liberty, neverthe less is not impossible, and it is sufficient to will to withdraw ourselves for a time from the tu
mult of exterior things for the mind the things of God.
to perceive
One
will say also that he has not time to ap to pious exercises himself business, he ob ply time and all my care. all absorbs my jects, You are mistaken, and your error is the cause ;
of
all
the evil
are mistaken:
we are here God and your
combating. You and not your
soul,
should be your first care. What man a if he gain the ivhole ivorld and profit his own soul ? Think you, then, loss the of suffer Will it will suffice you to say, / had not time? the Supreme Judge admit this excuse ? You had not time, will He say, to work out your
temporal doth
it
affairs,
CA USES OF DEFECTION.
61
salvation- -you, who enjoyed twenty, thirty, In vain do you allege that forty years of life ?
temporal things absorbed your time your first care should have been eternal things, for which Have I not said to all I placed you on earth. ;
that they must seek first the kingdom of God? .And before all things you have sought the goods of this world. For this reason you are without excuse you are lost through your own If you had given yourself a suitable time fault. for recollection you would have found in it a safeguard against the dissipation which has ;
caused your ruin. Behold, then, the triple cause of
all
defec
negligence, rashness, dissipation three shoals which we cannot fear sufficiently. Let
tions
:
keep our bark from them and ask the Blessed Virgin to help us to constantly avoid them. Then we shall not be of the number of those who desert the standard of virtue, but shall persevere to the end, faithful to Jesus, our King, and His divine Mother, our august Queen.
vis
CHAPTER HATRED OF
VIII. SIN.
*
Initium sapient
ce
timer Domini (The fear of the Lord
beginning of wisdom).
is
the
Ps. ex. 10.
HE
wisdom of which the Holy Spirit here speaks is no other than justice, virtue, the Christian life which Jesus eternal Wisdom, came to teach men. the Christ, It has for beginning- the fear of God that is, it begins by the fear of God, as the building of an edifice begins with the foundation which is to ;
sustain fear of
it.
But what must we understand by so important and so essential ?
God
This salutary fear is the fear of offending God by sin that is, hatred of sin, particularly mortal Without hatred of sin there is no true vir sin. tue and unless this hatred be deeply rooted in the soul virtue cannot be firm and solid, just as a tree cannot stand firm in the earth unless it have deep roots. One day, walking in the country, I saw a tree overturned by the wind, It while all the others remained standing. ;
;
was a vigorous tree, planted in good ground, it had fallen with its roots upturned be-
but
62
HATRED OF
SIN.
63
The cause they were not sufficiently deep. others had resisted the storm because of their which penetrated into the depths of the ground. Thus to be strong in virtue we should be deeply penetrated with hatred for sin. To this end let us consider, I. The necessity of this roots,
hatred
;
quiring
II. Its
qualities
;
III.
The manner
of ac
it.
Necessity. Hatred of sin is as necessary to the Christian life as the foundation is to an edi I.
fice.
these
Every
says the Saviour, that hcarctk
one,
my words, and doth them,
a wise
man
that built
liis
shall be likened to
house upon a rock, ajid
and the floods came, and the winds and they beat upon that house, and it fell not, for it was founded on a rock. And every one that heareth these my words, and doth them not, shall the rain fell, bleiv,
be like
a foolish
and
man
that built his Jiouse upon the
and
the floods came, and beat tliey upon that house, and it fell, and great was the fall thereof (Matt. vii. Observe that the house to be built is 24-27).
sand, the
the rain fell,
winds blew, and
the Christian
our Saviour
according to the teachings of the floods and the winds which
life ;
beat upon it are the passions, the temptations, and the scandals of the world the house re ;
be founded upon a rock, but it crumbles completely if it be built upon sand. We understand what this disastrous fall of a Christian signifies but what are we ;to under-
sists
all
if it
;
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
64
stand by this rock upon which the Christian must be founded not to yield to the storms of life ? life
This rock, this necessary foundation of virtue
what is
Initium sapentice timor Domini:
is it?
Have you
the fear of the Lord.
it
this strong
your heart? Your virtue Have you not this holy weak and undecided? Your house
and deep hatred
in
will resist assault.
or
fear,
is it
is
built
it
will fall to the
upon sand, and,
assailed
ground.
by temptation,
Whence
that so
is it
many Christians sin so easily, even after con fession relapse so quickly into the same sins ? Alas they are not penetrated with the hatred !
we speak. Then it is absolutely nec essary that hatred for sin be deeply rooted in the heart. of which
II.
Quality.
But what should
this hatred be
We
to give to virtue immovable solidity? derstand that it must be strong and solid
and to be so
it
must be a
un
itself,
sovereign hatred.
A
sovereign hatred of mortal sin consists in a horror and absolute aversion for this supreme in a determined will to resist it wherever evil ;
we meet
it
;
and, the
moment
there
is
question
implying mortal sin, to reject it with horror without admitting any deliberation. Thus a sensible man free to choose could not deliberate in the presence of death on the border
of anything
of a precipice or before a funeral pile.
If a
wild
HA TRED OF
SIN.
65
beast sprang towards you, ready to devour you, or an assassin to murder you, would you need to deliberate upon what you had to do? If a
you to the top of a high moun tain, and, showing you a terrible precipice, said to you Ask what you will, were it a kingdom, I will give it to you on condition you cast your self down this precipice think you you would
rich
man
led
:
need to
reflect before rejecting this insensate proposition ? If the same man, rich and power
placed you before a fiery furnace, like that of Babylon, and said to you You shall be king, and the whole world shall be yours, provided you consent to be burned alive in this furnace ful,
:
would you need
to deliberate before rejecting
with horror and contempt? No, no; when there is question of death, under whatever form it may be presented, however it may be veiled, we fly from it with horror by
this foolish solicitor
And when mor
an instinct of nature alone. tal sin presents itself
under any form whatever
-pleasure, honor, pecuniary profit is it not death? Is it not the death of the soul, the eter nal death of hell, which is offered us for a mise rable temporal advantage? Is it not the abyss of hell which is opened before us, is it not the eternal fire into which you are invited to cast yourself? And you hesitate to reject such an
insensate proposition? sures and riches. Ah
But !
I
am
offered plea
were you offered the
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
66
9
whole world could you, without madness, tate a
moment
before rejecting
it ?
hesi
there
Is
anything in the world for which you would con sent to be burned alive, not in the furnace of Babylon, but in the fire of hell, which will never be extinguished ? What doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world and suffer the loss of his own soul?
Then hatred of mortal lute
purpose to reject
stant s deliberation, the
and abso without an in
sin is a firm
this evil,
moment
it
presents
it
self.
III.
Acquisition.
To
obtain this holy dis
position, this sovereign hatred of mortal sin,
we
must, ist, daily ask it of God, begging Him to penetrate us with His fear, that we may say with the prophet: / have hated and abhorred iniquity (Ps. cxviii. 163). 2d. second means is to consider the
A
ice of sin
could
and
its
know what mortal
ceive such a horror of world could lead us into to
sin is
it
Oh
mal
we we would con
disastrous effects.
!
if
that nothing in the
it.
What, then, is mortal sin ? It is a disobedience God, a revolt against God, the rebellion of a
who
dares to defy his Creator and say I will not serve Thee. It the divine an is outrage against Majesty--an outrage like that of the Jews against the Son of God, our Lord Jesus Christ. It is a base creature
to
Him, Non serviam
HATRED OF
SIN.
67
ingratitude; for man, who has received every thing from God, not only makes Him no return
but uses these same benefits to outrage his Benefactor! He is guilty of this ingratitude by using his means, his talents, his senses, his tongue as so many instruments of The horrible Verger, having received an sin. alms, used it to buy a poniard, which he plunged in the breast of his benefactor. This baseness is equalled, and even exceeded, by the ingrati tude of the sinner. What further is mortal sin? It is a supreme evil and the principle of all evil. Sin maketh na for
His
benefits,
(Prov. xiv. 34). Mortal sin is the because it is the only cause of eter supreme nal perdition. If any one among us- -which God forbid must one day be excluded from heaven, what will be the cause ? If any unfortunate soul among us--O Mary, preserve us !- -must one day be cast into eternal fire, why will it be ? Be cause of mortal sin, mortal sin only. Behold, then, the supreme evil, the sole cause of eternal misery. Therefore we must detest it, hate it, abhor it with a sovereign hatred.
tions miserabl evil,
!
.
O
holy Virgin salutary hatred ;
!
it
.
.
obtain for thy children this will be the immovable basis
of their virtue, the pledge of their perseverance unto the end.
CHAPTER
IX.
PURITY OF CONSCIENCE. Beati
mtmdo
corde,
quoniam
ipsi
Dctim videbunt (Blessed are
the clean of heart, for they shall see
HE
and
v. 8.
frequently speaks to Scripture of purity of heart
Holy
us in
MATT.
God)
soul.
Spirit
He
presents it to us as a worthy of all our desires.
precious blessing Therefore the holy Church, instructing us by the mouth of her ministers and her doctors,
unceasingly recommends
it
to us,
and
tells
us
that purity of heart is one of the pivots of the It is necessary, then, to know it Christian life. well in order to love and practise it perfectly.
To this end let us consider, I. understood by purity of heart ;
What must What are
II.
What practice it requires of us. What must we understand by purity
be its
fruits; III. I.
heart?
of
Purity of heart, which is also called of soul, purity of conscience, is the
purity From this splendor of a soul unstained by sin announcement we understand that purity of heart is not the same thing as chastity. The 68
PURITY OF CONSCIENCE. latter,
which
body
the
69
called the angelic virtue, ex cludes the stains of the flesh- -it is purity of ;
is
first,
purity of heart, excludes the
stains of all vices.
Our soul, cleansed by the waters of holy bap tism, has been clothed again by the Holy Spirit with a supernatural purity called sanctifying grace a divine garment of which the robe of baptism is the image and symbol. This gar ment communicates to the soul a splendor sur passing the brightness of gold, a whiteness ef facing that of snow. Unfortunately this whiteness may be tarnish
beauty which be changed into de may and ugliness. Scripture tells us of the formity beauty of a Judith, an Esther, a Joseph, an Ab salom. Take a still greater beauty does not ed, this splendor obscured, this
enraptures the angels
:
a sickness, a wound, suffice to change all its graces into deformity? And particularly the
hand, of death touching beauty, does it to slime and corruption ?
duce
not re Now, the it
beauty of the scul is subject to similar changes and stains analogous to the corporal effects of sickness and death. A malady, a wound, lepro sy, represent the stains of venial sins;
death, corruption, the horrors of the tomb, offer an im age of mortal sin, which our Saviour shows us in these words Woe to you, Scribes and Phari :
sees, liypocrites, because you are like to
wkited
sep-
SODALITY DIRECTOR
70
ulckres, wJucJi
MANUAL.
S
outwardly appear
but wit kin are full of dead fiithiness (Matt,
men
to
men
s bones
beautiful,
and of
all
xxiii. 27).
we speak
The
purity of heart of which opposed to these stains as light
is
opposed
is
to
darkness it preserves the soul from them, or, if it have already contracted them, it tends to ;
make them
disappear, removing
of all the
first
and then diminishing more and more the stains of venial sin and all that could tarnish the lustre and whiteness of our souls. Behold what we must understand by purity of heart. Let us now see how precious is this and what are its fruits. purity corruption of mortal
sin,
Fruits of purity of heart. Purity of heart for the soul which possesses it the principle of all blessings, since, according to II.
becomes
the testimony of the
God by
its
Holy
Spirit,
it
enraptures
beauty and attracts the abundance
of His graces. ist. In the Canticles the divine Spouse ad dresses the pure soul these affectionate words
:
not a spot O my love, in thee (Cant. iv. 7). He that loveth cleanliness of heart shall have the king for Jiis friend (Prov. xxii.
Thou art
u).
and
all fair,
God, who
is
is
purity and sanctity, cannot face, as the sun cannot
suffer sin before
His
suffer darkness.
Thy
evil, cries the
there
eyes are too
prophet to
pure
to
behold
the Lord, and thou
PURITY OF CONSCIENCE. canst not look on iniquity (Habac.
He
fixes
i.
71
On
13).
the
them with love on innocent
contrary, souls who endeavor to imitate the immaculate
Lamb, of
whom
loved Son, in
the Father said
whom I am
:
This
is
my
be
well pleased.
Purity of heart abundantly attracts the Just as men would not pour a precious liquid into an unclean vase, so God 2d.
gifts of grace.
not pour His gifts into our hearts until they are purified but according as we purify them He pours into them His treasures of light will
;
and charity.
It is for this reason that the Sa viour says: Blessed are the clean, of Jieart, for tJiey shall see God. They shall see God not only af ter this life in light and glory, but even in this
world
in the light of faith and clearness will they
grace
;
with maf-
velious
comprehend the God, will they see the will of God, the presence of God, the image of God, in all those
word
of
represent Him on earth. the facility for prayer which pure souls usually experience. Light from on high them as the penetrates rays of the sun pene
who
Hence
trate a
them
pure
crystal.
God
s
image
is
reflected
as in a stainless mirror.
Purity of con science produces that calm, that interior secu rity so favorable to the contemplation of hea in
venly things. It makes the soul, says St. Aloyresemble a quiet stream, in the unruffled surface of which the sun and stars are brilliantsius,
72
SODALITY DIRECTOR S
MANU
L.
It is in a pure and calm heart, ly reflected. said St. Francis of Sales, that God manifests Himself, just as on a clear night, when the Lake
very calm and the waters undis turbed by the wind, the heavens and stars are so well reflected therein that you behold as much beauty gazing down into the lake as you of
Geneva
is
would looking up
to the sky. the disciples of our Saviour there was Among the one, young St. John, brother of St. James the of Zebedee the fisherman, and distin son Less,
guished for his innocence and purity. Therefore see what favors he received from Jesus Christ.
He was
the object of His predilection and
merited the name of the beloved disciple; nt the Last Supper, placed beside our Saviour, he had the ineffable happiness of resting his head on the breast of his divine Master; at the foot of the cross with the Blessed Virgin Mary, he was chosen to be the adopted son of this incomparable Mother and to take Jesus place with her; he was filled with the treasures of chanty, so that to the end of his life his words breathed but this virtue he was inundated with heavenly light to contemplate the deep est mysteries of the Divinity like unto the eagle, as the holy Fathers express it, he rose to the greatest heights and fixed his gaze on ;
;
the very centre of eternal light. It is for this reason that he has for symbol the mysterious
PURITY OF CONSCIENCE.
73
Oh how fully in the be eagle of Ezechiel. loved disciple we see realized our Saviour s words Blessed are the clean of Jieart, for they !
:
shall see God. III.
can
We
we
Practice.
How
can
we
obtain,
preserve, this enviable purity of
must
first
how
heart?
endeavor to remove the stains
we have had
the misfortune to contract, and care avoid contracting new ones; with vigilant
other words, expiate our past faults and avoid committing them in the future. i st. To expiate the past the fundamental means is contrition without repentance there Then there are the Sacrament of is no pardon. in
;
Penance, mortification, patience, and all good works. 2d. To avoid relapsing into sin, to avoid ve nial faults, we must practise examination of conscience and arm ourselves against our pre
dominant
taking as motto, Vince te ipsum Thus we shall enter and -Conquer thyself advance in the beautiful way of the pure of fault,
!
have part in the blessings Blessed are promised those who walk therein tJie undefiled in tJie way, wlio walk in the law of the Lord (Ps. cxviii. i). heart,
and
shall
CHAPTER
X.
PRAYER. Habentes phialas aureas plenas odoramentorum, qucz sunt orasanctorum (They had golden vials full of odors, which
tiones
are the prayers of the saints).
APOC.
v. 8.
ET
us speak to-day of prayer, which the doctors, with reason, call the great means of salvation. It is a general
opinion
among them
that one
is
a Christian in
Are we proportion as he practises prayer. faithful in this holy exercise, we shall live well ;
are
we wanting
in
it,
we
shall live
ill.
A man
of prayer will be always rich in virtues; if, on the contrary, says St. Bonaventure, I see a nian little zeal for prayer, who takes lit to pains pray and does it but with non chalance, I do not require more to know that Whoever neglects his soul is void of virtue.
who shows
tle
prayer and cares not to converse with God may be regarded as dead and deprived of an interior
is,
:
Is
m
rtiius est et vita carens.
the language of the Fathers, which moreover, conformable to that of Scripture
Such it
life is
;
shows that prayer
is 74
justly called the great
PRA YER. means of practise
end
salvation.
it
let
May we
more and more
us
75
consider,
I.
appreciate and
To this perfectly The excellence of !
prayer; II. Its necessity III. Its practice. I. Excellence of What is prayer? prayer. ist. It is converse with God. It is sufficient ;
this, to see- that prayer is the most useful exercise which can oc cupy man on earth. What a favor it is to
to
comprehend
noblest, the
speak, be
world
!
it
but a moment, with a prince of this
Happy Samaritan
to
have conversed
with Jesus at the well of Jacob! ... In this sublime intercourse the creature offers his Creator adoration, praise, thanksgiving, and supplication in a word, pours out at His feet all the sentiments of his heart. Now, nothing is more plensing to God than this humble and confident outpouring of a heart which recog nizes Him as the Sovereign Good.
Prayer is an incense which rises as an odor of sweetness to the throne of God. Thyme and the perfumes which the priests of the Old Law burned in the Temple of Jerusalem, the in cense which burns in the churches of the new Law, are but an image of prayer. Let my prayer 2d.
be directed as incense in tliy siglit, says the pro phet (Ps. cxl. 2). / saw, says St. John in the
Apocalypse, about the throne fuur-and-tweuty an cients sitting, clothed in their heads were crowns
white garments,
of
g Id,
.
.
.
and on and in
SCD LITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
76
hands harps and golden vials full of odors, wliicJi are the prayers of saints (Apoc. iv. 4; v. 8). Have we not reason to say that an humble prayer offered to God is worth more than the their
most eloquent words, the greatest winning the applause of multitudes?
orations,
Prayer is the root of the Christian life. does a tree in the bosom of the earth draw the vivifying sap which causes it to grow and produce fruit? Is it not through its root, without which it would be sterile and perish? 3d.
How
The the
He
man is this heavenly tree planted by hand of God to produce fruits of virtue. just
shall be as a tree
t at is planted by the waters, shall it cease at any time neither the prophet says This tree thrives so admi to b ing forth fruit. rably because it plunges its roots into the waters ;
of grace- -that is, is given to prayer, and on His law meditates day and wgJit (Ps. i.) 4th. Prayer is the key of heavenly treasures. Giving it this name, St. Augustine makes us un derstand all the value and excellence of prayer.
Whoever possesses this key is rich in the riches Wit of God, powerful in the power of God. ness Abraham praying for the guilty Sodom, Moses praying for the Israelites in their strug gle against the Amalecites, the early faithful
praying for St. Peter in chains. does not possess a spirit of prayer .
ways poor,
for
.
.
Whoever
shall be al
the treasures of heaven shall
PRA YER. But
be closed to him. selves
to
depends upon our \ve have but to words: Ask, aud you it
possess this key
practise our
Saviour
s
77
;
s/iall rcctive.
Necessity of prayer. Prayer being so precious, it should be practised with earnest ness and gratitude yet such is the indifference and torpor of men that they practise it but II.
;
little
frequently, and sometimes totally neglect avoid falling into this fatal negligence
To
it.
us stimulate our fervor by considering the necessity of prayer. let
Prayer is of obligation, of precept. We otiglit always to pray, says our Saviour (Luke xviii. i). Watch ye, and pray that ye enter not into temptation (Matt. xxvi. 41). These reite rated precepts the Saviour confirmed by His ist.
example. 2d. Prayer is necessary as a means. God, though fully disposed to grant us His gifts, par .
.
.
ticularly salvation
the gift par excellence- -has
made them dependent on prayer; He has made a condition without which He usually does not grant us His favors. The divine mercy is a fountain open to all men; but to drink its salutary waters it is necessary to draw them. Sir, said the Samaritan woman to our Saviour, it
hast not /ting wherein to draw, and the well is deep ; whence then, hast thou living water? mean ing that to draw water an instrument is necestJiou
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
78
The instrument necessary to draw from the source of living \vater--that is, the source of graceis prayer. Providence gives man the harvests and other fruits of the earth for his
sary.
food and maintenance, but He exacts as a con dition the labor of the farmer. Without labor there shall be no harvest, and without prayer the soul shall perish of
there shall be no grace
;
inanition. 3d. If a poor man wishes to be relieved from his misery he must ask for help. If he knew
benefactor always ready to help him would he not go to him ? This poor man is I and each one of you this rich benefactor is l?ei menGod, trom whom we must ask alms did sunms- -We are God s beggars, says St. Au a rich
;
gustine.
We poverty are poor and naked because of our sins infirm and suffering because of our passions destitute of all things because of our want of virtue weak and without energy to fulfil our duties and perform good works. In all things and at all times we need God we should have re course to Him in prayer. Happy for us were we well convinced of our We would hasten to hold out our misery hand to Him who can relieve us. But too fre quently in the midst of our poverty we believe ourselves rich and in need of nothing, while we Would
to
God we knew our
!
;
;
;
;
!
PR A YER.
79
Thou kn west not, says for everything. art ivntclied, and mis tJiou that Holy Spirit,
want the
poor, and biind, and naked (Apoc. Let us contemplate Jesus Christ and iii. 17). the saints, His true disciples let us consider
and
erable,
;
innocence, their patience, their good works then let us turn our eyes upon our
their
;
and we will come forth from our pov we will have recourse through prayer and erty, to Him who can enrich us. 4th. Prayer is necessary to all, to sinners and Without prayer the sinner will not to the just. selves,
God by a sincere conversion, he will not break the chains of his evil habits without prayer the just man will not advance in virtue, return to
;
he will not even persevere in good, and will soon Watch, yield to the temptations of the enemy. and pray, says the Lord, that ye enter not into temptation. flesh
is
falls,
so
1 lie spirit indeed is willing, but the
Whence are so many lamentable many sudden relapses after sincere con
weak.
from a want of prayer? We must pray particularly in temptation; without prayer a Christian is like a soldier without arms
fessions, if not
assailed yield.
by a thousand enemies- -he cannot but Watcli, and pray tJiat ye enter not into
temptation. III. Practice.
How
must we pray?
No
easier than prayer, for it is the words of a child to its father, the petition of a beggar
thing
is
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
8o
to a rich benefactor.
What
child
how
to speak to a father or mother knows not how to ask alms? gar
?
knows not
What beg They do not
need eloquent discourse, they do not need even
words
go
to
;
often a look, a sign, is sufficient. Then like a child to its father, like a beg
God
gar to his benefactor, and you will prayer. Nevertheless
offer a
good
know the con and the key of prayer. ist. The conditions of a good prayer are re spect, confidence, attention, and perseverance. 2d. The object of prayer is what we must This object ask, what we may ask, of God. it
will be well to
ditions, the object,
all the blessings we may desire for soul and body, for ourselves and for others. When there is question of temporal blessings,
extends to
such as health, fortune, success in business, it is fitting we should ask them on the condition, tacit or expressed, that they be salutary for us; for frequently the trials from which we ask to be delivered are useful or necessary to the salvation of our souls, and the blessings we would enjoy here below would cause us to lose heaven. Man is ignorant of these conse quences, but God sees them all and for this reason we must only ask for temporal favors as far as God sees they will be useful to our soul. 3d. The kev of prayer- -that is, the condition which opens the heart and causes it to pour it;
PRA
81
YER.
self forth in prayer, that \vhich helps
well and with facility the presence of God.
is
the
us to pray
remembrance of
Before beginning to
pray recollect yourself by an act of lively faith, place yourself in the presence of God at the
His divine Majesty.
you are pene trated with this presence, as if He were visible to your eyes, you will pray spontaneously, and you will pray with a perfect respect and confi dence. Can a child be in the presence of its father without speaking to him ? a creature feet of
in
the presence
Him
and
carried
back to
of his
praying to
If
God without adoring
Him ? Are you
quickly
your mind the divine presence and resume your
away by
distractions, bring
prayer with new attention.
Such
is
of prayer.
the excellence, necessity, and practice To learn this heavenly art well we
must ask, through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin, the assistance of the Holy Spirit, who, according to the apostle, helpeth our in firmity, and Himself asketh for us with unspeak able groanings
(Rom.
viii. 26),
CHAPTER XL THE WORD OF GOD AND READING. Non ore
in solo pane vivit homo, sed in
Dei ^Not
in
that proceedeth
bread alone doth
omni verbo quod procedit de live, but in every word
man
from the mouth of God).
IVING
MATT,
iv, 5.
beings must have nourishment
this is a general law Souls are subject to this law as well as bodies. The food of the soul is truth, particularly the truth contained in the
to preserve of nature.
life;
word of God and pious reading. It is for this reason our Saviour has said Not in bread alone :
dotli
man
live, but in every the mouth of God.
from
Let us speak on
word
that procetdeth
this interesting subject, first
word of God, then of pious reading. The word of God. What is the word
of the I.
of
God, and how must we hear it? ist. The word of God of which there
is here in the contained preaching of the question This preaching was ministers of the Church. begun by Jesus Christ From that time J sits
is
:
began nal
to
preach (Matt.
Word,
the
Word
was the eter which God, spoke in
iv. 17).
of
It
THE WORD OF GOD AND READING.
83
person to the human race. As this preaching was to reach men of all countries and all times, Jesus Christ charged His apostles to promul it, and preach it to all creatures. have and their succes apostles obeyed docile to the divine mandate, con sors, equally tinue the ministry of preaching their word is
gate
it,
repeat
The
;
;
word of God in the sense that God sends them to repeat and explain in His name the the
doctrine which the
mouth
He
has given to the world by Lord Jesus
of His only Son, our
Christ.
The word of God is a seed. A sower went forth to sow his seed, says the Saviour some of it fell upon good ground and it 2d.
;
This brought forth fruit an hundred-fold. adds the Saviour, is the word of God.
seed,
Now, when that
is,
upon a well-prepared heart upon good ground it produces abun it
dant and rich the Christian in the
3d.
alone
next
?
falls
fruit.
.
.
What
in this
life
is
this fruit,
world and
life
if
not
eternal
.
The word of God is bread. Not in bread doth man live, but in every word that pro-
ceedeth
from
the moutli of God.
This spiritual
food sustains the the soul.
It is
life, the strength, the vigor of no less necessary than that of
the body, and without the
becomes weak and
falls.
says the Psalmist, and
word of God a soul I am smitten as grass,
my
heart
is
withered, be-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
84
cause I forgot to cat
my
bread (Ps.
ci. 5).
When
neglect to frequent sermons, and we cease to nourish the mind with divine truths, we fall
we
into ignorance, into forgetfulness of duty, into a state of spiritual languor, in which we yield
to all temptations. 4th. The word of
God
word of God, says effectual, and more piercing than any two edged sword, and reaching unto the division of the soul and tJie spi rit (Hebrews iv. 12). It cuts off all vices by it making us combat them penetrates our it the heart to reaches them thoughts purify is
a sword.
St. Paul, is living
TJie
and
;
;
produce therein repentance for sin and love God. When the terrible words, death, judgment, hell, eternity, resound in the soul they produce therein a salutary emotion which
to
for
opens the source of
tears.
5th. The word of God is a light. Thy word, says the prophet, is a lamp to my feet, and a light to my paths (Ps. cxviii. 105). It is very easy to go astray in the desert of this world, to fall into errors and snares, to be deceived by illusion
and untruth, to take for gold what is only dust, and for a solid good what is but empty smoke.
How ed
?
are these clouds, this darkness, dissipat By the word of God, before which all
errors, all impious, heretical,
immoral doctrine,
the shadows of night splendors of the sun.
vanish like
before the
THE WORD OF GOD AND READING. The word
6th.
of
God
is
a
fire.
Was
85
not our
heart burning witliin us, said the disciples one to another at Emmaus, whilst He spoke in the
way and opened to us the Scriptures ? (Luke xxiv. The word of God inflames our heart with 32). love for God and for our Lord Jesus Christ by showing us how much He has loved us; it inflames us with love for our neighbor by caus ing us to see that it is Jesus Christ Himself
whom we it
love in the person of our neighbor; inflames us with love for heaven and eternal
blessings by teaching us the price of these blessings and the ineffable beauty of heaven it inflames us with devotion and fervor in the ;
God by bringing before us the greatness of the Master we serve. Such is the di service of
vine
fire
which the word of
maintains in the heart;
posed to the destroying
it is
fire
God
enkindles and
a vivifying fire, op of the passions and
vice.
That the divine word may produce these salutary effects in our souls we must hear it with the requisite dispositions with respect, as if listening to God Himself; with humility, always applying it to ourselves and never to others with a Christian spirit, seeking edifi cation rather than the gratification of a vain :
;
Consequently we must accept the all who preach, whatever the talent with which God has endowed them. curiosity.
word of God from
IISHA
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
86
Provided
garden be watered, says St. Francis of Sales, what matters it whether the water reach it through a reservoir of wood, of marble, or of lead ? May we always hear the word with these holy the
Then it will truly be the food dispositions of our souls, and a heavenly seed which will !
and good works. bad Reading. reading is a pernicious and poison, good pious reading is a salutary food which recreates our souls and fills them with strength and joy. i st. We understand by good reading that which is neither injurious nor frivolous, but, on the contrary, is beneficial to the reader by en lightening his mind and gently attracting his flourish there in all virtues If
II.
heart to virtue. 2d.
A
good book
is
a veritable friend, a con
soler, a guide in the path of life. 3d. It is a friend who is complacent
and
in
it returns from teresting to a supreme degree the most distant countries, it has lived in the ;
we find we can always question
most remote ages will
;
;
it
whenever we
it, it
is
ever dis
posed to answer, and it ceases to speak at desire it speaks of all that we would know ;
our ;
it
us the truth without evasion, reproves our vices without ever wounding us it repeats the tells
;
same thing
for us as often as
complaint or weariness.
we wish without
THE WORDS OF COD AND READING. Yes, us
a true friend,
it is
87
which the Holy Spirit
greater than all treasures, and I am not astonished at the words of the pious au thor of the Imitation, who declares that, hav tells
is
ing sought rest everywhere, he found it only in the reading of a good book. I have sought for rest everywhere," he says, but I have found "
"
it nowhere except in a little corner with a little In anguLo cum libtl/o. book What good do not pious books effect in souls! St Ignatius was converted by reading the lives of the saints, and St. Augustine by reading the Blessed Berchmans died Epistles of St. Paul. to his heart the clasping precious book which "
in the path of perfection. us love the word of God let us
guided his steps
Then listen to
let it
;
when preached by God
s
minister; is offered
let us read it in pious books, where it us in every form. Let us shun bad or doubtful books as a most fatal poison and let us remem ber that we are the children of her who is called ;
Scat of Wisdom because her ears are ever open to the word of God, and she unceasingly medi tates
upon
it
in
her heart.
vabat omnia verb a
(Luke
ii,
19).
Maria autem
hcec, conferens
in
conser-
corde
suo
CHAPTER
XII.
CONFESSION AND EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE, Si nosmetipsos judicaremus, non utique judicaremur
would judge ourselves we should not be judged).
i
(If
COR.
we xi.
31-
F
the thought of the judgment we shall undergo after death makes us tremble, we should in prudence use every means
our power to mitigate its severity. To this end the apostle indicates a most efficacious means, which is to judge ourselves. If we would judge ourselves, he tells us, we should not
in
be judged.
But what must we understand by judging
We
judge ourselves, we accuse ourselves, and we condemn ourselves, ist, in the 2d, every time we holy tribunal of penance ourselves
?
;
examine our conscience to correct our faults. Let us speak of this double judgment. I.
Confession,
ist.
What
the Sacrament of Penance?
is
confession, or
It is
one of the
A
sweetest consolations of a Christian. poor sick man a prey to evils could not but be happy to find a physician who could cure him, or a 88
CONFESSION.
89
salutary fountain the waters of which would This sick man repre restore him to health. for we are sents the sinner, represents us all ;
all
sinners,
and our wounds are our
who
offers to
cure us
is
sins.
The
the confessor
physician the salutary fountain open to us is the Sac rament of Penance. Should we not hasten to
have recourse to
it?
Ah! men undertake
;
dif
voyages to be cured of corporal mala they go far in search of mineral waters for the chance of an uncertain cure. A divine fountain is offered us for the cure of all the in firmities and all the wounds of our soul, and ficult
dies
;
yet the majoritv show no anxiety to profit by it.
The Sacrament of the Christian
of Penance life.
use of confession shall
he
who
in
this
is
the great axis
He who makes fulfil all
a holy
his duties,
and
soon neglect everything neglects else. So that we may judge of the fervor of a Christian by his practice in this matter of con If he never go to confession, if he fession. confess his sins once a year or more frequently with true piety, I shall know from his practice it
shall
the measure of his spiritual Generally speaking, if confession be
respect
strength.
on sufferance everything is on sufferance; if it be in full vigor everything is in full vigor and progress.
Confession
is
one of the great resources of
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
90
It penetrates the soul with the Christian life. a grace which purifies, strengthens, and con And observe that these pre firms it in peace. cious effects are more abundant in proportion as the dispositions of the penitent are more
What, then, must be done to dispose ourselves for the Sacrament of Penance? How must we make our confession ? It would
perfect.
be superfluous to here set forth the three parts of the Sacrament of Penance and the actions which are its preparation but it will not be useless to make known two thoughts which are ;
singularly suited to facilitate the preparation and worthily dispose our heart when we are
about to have recourse to this sacrament. The first thought is This confession I am about to make may be my last. Certainly a time will come when I shall make my last con fession- -the confession after which I shall ap :
pear before God.
If
I
knew
that this
was that
how
great would be my fervor! Therefore each time I approach the holy tri
confession
bunal
I
shall say to myself:
This
may
be the last
time.
The second thought
is
this
self at the feet of the priest
:
In casting
my
I
prostrate myself In Pen at the feet of Jesus Christ Himself. there is a in other all the sacraments, ance, as invisi other the double minister one visible, ble
;
one secondary, the other primary.
The
CONFESS:ON.
91
the priest, but he is secondary Christ, the principal Minister, who
visible minister
to Jesus
is
uses the priest, His minister, to remit sin, some what as the master of a house would use the key. Thus we may here apply these words of the divine Master: / am with you all days, even
to
the
consummation of the world (Matt,
Come to me, all you that labor and are r burdened, and I refresh you (Matt. xi. 28) // is I, fear not (Luke xxiv. 36) and these He that heareth you heareth rne^ and he that despiseth xxviii. 20)
;
<,vill
;
:
;
you despiseth me(LukG
x.
We
16).
see
how
effi
cacious are these thoughts of faith to encourage and animate the Christian penitent, and inspire
him with the If,
holiest dispositions.
in fact, it is to
present myself,
Jesus Christ I am about to at the feet of the best of
if it is
am
about to make the avowal of have no difficulty in being pene my trated with the repentance of a prodigal child
fathers that
I
sins, I will
;
since in listening to the confessor 1 am listen ing to Jesus Christ, I will have no difficulty in following his direction and giving him absolute
obedience.
Such is the salutary effect produced in the soul of the penitent by the double thought of death and of Jesus Christ present in the person of His minister.
my by
Therefore
I
will
always begin Penance
preparation for the Sacrament of saying to myself: This confession
may
be
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
92
my
last,
and
Christ that
it
is
am
I
less to the priest than to Jesus Then to confess sins.
my
my
heart shall easily be
with the dispositions its fulness the fruit of
filled
requisite to reap in all the sacrament.
Examination of conscience. We speak which must be made before confession, and which is called sacramental examen because it serves as prepa ration for the sacrament, but of daily exami II.
here, not of that examination
nation of conscience for the purpose of cor
recting one
s
faults,
and which
ascetic or devotional examen.
is
It
called is
an
well to
importance and know its prac Importance: Examination of conscience is one of the most efficacious means to correct one s faults and advance in virtue thus it has been recommended and practised by all the masters of the spiritual life- -St. Basil, St. Au understand
its
tice.
;
gustine, St. Antony, St. Bernard, St.
Bonaven-
ture, St. Ignatius.
This exercise
is
to the
human
heart what
to a garden. The gardener must continually watch his garden to remove the
weeding
is
weeds which are always springing up. In like manner vices and faults are continually spring ing up in our hearts, and we must labor unceas ingly to exterminate them by means of exami nation of conscience.
This examen
is
to
the Christian what the
EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE.
93
If the lat daily reckoning is to the merchant. ter wishes to succeed in his business he must
be careful to make up his accounts each even ing in like manner the Christian, to succeec] in the affair of his salvation, must exact of himself a daily account of his gains and losses by means of examination of conscience. Without this exercise he will soon fall into negligence and tepidity by faithfully practising it he will ;
;
sustain his fervor
and
will
make
continual pro
gress.
The
exercise of examination of conscience
is
the true means of observing that vigilance so recommended by the Saviour Watch ye, and :
pray that you enter not into temptation. We must watch over our thoughts, our words, and our actions, not only to avoid sin
but also to dis cover whether we have sinned during the day, and to correct and repent of any faults into which we have fallen. Who does not see that the examen of which we speak is no other than the practice of this vigilance, since
it
consists
searching our thoughts, our words, our ac tions, to discover any fault we have committed, to repent of it, with a firm purpose to watch over ourselves better in the future ? Practice How are we to practise examina tion of conscience? Determine a certain time which you will give to it each day for exam ple, a quarter of an hour before retiring. in
:
:
SODALITY DIRECTOR
94
At the time your
fixed
for
S
MA NUAL.
place yourself on
it
God and im
knees, and, after thanking
ploring the light of the
Holy
Spirit,
make a
excite general and particular your heart to make an act of contrition and a
examen, then
firm purpose of
amendment
We have just used ticular
examen.
By
for the future.
the terms general and par
general
examen we under
we have done in and deed our last examen since thought, word, we understand by particular examen that which stand a review of
all
that
;
to
relates
the
predominant
fault
we wish
to
we more
specially wish extirpate, or the virtue After having reviewed all the ac to acquire. tions of the day we make our particular ex
amen.
examen
What have I done for my How many times have I
?
particular fallen into
the fault or practised the virtue which I have chosen as the subject of my particular examen ? It is useful to mark in a little book the number of these faults and acts of virtue.
Particular examen, provided
with constancy, cious.
Your
is
faults,
it
be practised
always victoriously effica said Fr. Maitre Avila, will
if you persevere in the prac examen. Such are examination of con science and sacramental confession. Here,
not hold out long tice of
then,
as
we
said
in
the
beginning, are two
ways of judging ourselves, of condemning our selves, in order to make us better and purify us
EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE.
95
before the great day when God shall judge us. may here apply the words of the apostle
We
:
we judge
ourselves by a holy use of confes sion and examination of conscience, we shall not be judged by God and we shall find if
mercy
before His tribunal.
CHAPTER
XIIL
HOLY COMMUNION. Qui manducat meant camem, et bibit meum sanguinem, in me manet, et ego in illo (He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood abideth in me, and I in him). JOHN vi. 57.
HE
most sublime, or rather the most
divine, act a Christian can accomplish
on earth
is
Holy Communion, or the
reception of the Body and Blood of Jesus The Sa Christ at the table of the Eucharist.
viour in His ineffable love invites thither
the
all
and poor; and we respond to His most ardent desires when we frequently ap proach His Holy Table with the requisite dis faithful, rich
positions.
But, alas!
how many
Christians
withdraw from it. And those who do draw near, do they always come with the fervor and piety which these mysteries require ? Ah if all hearts do not sigh after the happiness of Communion, if too frequently we communicate without the most intimate devotion, it is be cause we do not sufficiently understand what !
Holy Communion
is.
Let us endeavor to comprehend more and
HOLY COMMUNION.
97
more the excellence and fruits of this mys as the manner of worthily par
tery, as well
ticipating in
it.
Excellence.
I.
What
is
Communion
It is
?
divine banquet, the visit of Jesus Christ, the ineffable union of the Incarnate Word with
the
the Christian soul.
The banquet
ist.
of which
we speak
indi
is
cated by this passage of the Gospel: A attain man made a great supper, and invited many (Luke xiv. 16). This man, this father of a family, is
no other than the Man-God, our Lord Jesus Christ, who is at the same time our King and our Father. He prepared this great banquet the eve of His Passion, at the Last Supper, when, instituting the divine Eucharist, He dis tributed it to His disciples, saying: Take ye and Do this for a Drink ye all of this. eat. commemoration of me. From that day the Eucharistic table has been established in every wherever there are country of the world a there is Christians, Holy Table at which they .
.
.
.
.
;
assemble, as the children of one family at the This mysterious Table table of their Father. remains prepared through all centuries; the faithful
and
saints of all ages successively
we
fi
e-
can say Be quent Contemplating hold the Holy Table at which were nourished the apostles and the first disciples of our Sa viour, and after them the Gregories, the Leos, it.
it,
:
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
98
the Basils, the Augustines, the Ambroses, and our Fathers in the faith to which will come future generations until the consummation of all
;
ages.
The guests
invited are
all
the faithful.
Come
tj
me, says our Saviour, all you tliat labor and arc bur dened. He invites all, rich and poor, because
He
is
all
his
the Father of children.
all,
He
and a father nourishes all, the just and
invites
sinners- -yes, the sinners are also called, not that in a state of mortal sin they can eat the bread of life, but they are called to make them
selves worthy to partake of it by being purified from their sins. What goodness on the part of the Lord our God to thus invite to His table the poorest and humblest of His servants !
And what It is
the food served at this banquet ? the divine Body of Jesus Christ, His ado is
rable flesh and precious Blood. If living beings are universally subject to the law of nutrition, if nature imposes upon all the necessity of food, it
has also prepared nourishment suited to each Parents are careful to procure it for their
one.
children in proportion to their age and condi The food of the poor is not that of the rich, and the children of the king are royally
tion
nourished.
What,
Should
it
God
then, shall be
tire
food of
Should it not be divine? not be bread from heaven, the bread
the children of
?
of the angels, the true bread of the children of
HOLY COMMUNION. God
Behold how
vere panis filiorum ?
munion
is
99
a divine banquet.
It is also
Com
the visit
of Jesus Christ.
Holy Communion
is
to the faithful soul.
the visit of Jesus Christ
What
condescension on
And what
happiness for us to receive It is related the visit of the King of kings! that a king deigned one day to enter a poor cot tage and seat himself in the midst of his hum
His part
blest
!
and great was the happiness
subjects;
But
not Jesus Christ During His mortal life He was pleased to enter the house of a centurion to heal his servant; He deigned to lodge with
of the poor people. more than a king?
is
filling his heart with joy and sancti Let us not him and all his family. fying the favors or the centurion Zachary they envy received, for a similar, even greater, favor is
Zachary,
.
granted
Ah
!
sick, if
us.
.
.
.
.
.
the visit of a physician consoles the the visit of the rich rejoices the poor, if if
Mary filled the house of Elizabeth with grace, what will not the visit of Jesus Christ effect in the soul which receives Him in the Holy Eucharist? Holy Communion is the union of Jesus Christ
the visit of
with the Christian soul. Food which is assimi lated with our substance is a figure of the union which is established between Jesus Christ
and the communicant.
SODALITY DIRECT OF S
ioo
How
we
shall
AN UAL.
AT
express this ineffable union?
Must we compare it to the embrace of a child and its mother? to the embrace of the father on the neck of his prodigal son? to that of Jesus Himself embracing- little children ? Yes, it is an embrace, but more than an em brace He tJiat eateth my flesh and drinketh my falling
:
blood abidetJi in me,
and I
in
Ah
him.
!
it is
the
union of the branch and the vine the branch is in the vine, being there implanted, and the vine is in the branch through its vivifying influence. ;
manner and more intimately does Je sus Christ unite Himself with the soul in Holy In
like
Communion
to
fill it
with His
life
and
fruitful-
ness.
All this gives us sible excellence of
see what are
some idea of the inexpres Holy Communion. Let us
its fruits.
The fruits of Holv Communion ^ be reduced to the three may following: an in crease of the spiritual life, growth in virtues, the II.
Fruits
transformation
of
the
Christian
into
Christ,
The life of sanctifying grace which the communicant brings from the Holy Table is susceptible of increase, and its vigor, when weakened, may be restored, just as corporal ist.
restored
by the virtue of ordinary exhausted bv fa and as soon as he receives nou tigue hunger; rishment he revives, his strength is renewed. vigor
bread.
is
Look
at a traveller
HOL Y C
"MM
UNION.
i
oI
Jonathan, pressed by hunger, dipped the end of the rod he held in his hand in a honeycomb, it in his mouth, his eyes were enightened- -illn minati sunt oculi ejus (i Kings xiv. thus the dying flame of a lamp revives 27) when fed with oil. Elias the prophet, flying from before the face of Jezabel, was extended
and, putting
1
;
upon the ground with weariness and fatigue when an angel brought him bread to nourish And he arose, says the Scripture, and him. walked in the strength of that food to the These are so many mount of God, Horeb. figures of that increase of
life,
of that restoration
of spiritual strength, effected in the soul by the food of the Holy Eucharist.
While strengthening the life of grace in us, Holy Communion gives us also a pledge of future glory and a glorious resurrection.
den
:
in virtue. Holy Communion is what an abundant dew is to a gar
Growth
2cl.
to the soul it
causes the flowers of all virtues to spring But there are two to which it gives a
therein.
growth- -charity and chastitv. not without reason that the Holy Eucha has been called the sacrament of love and
special It. is
rist
charity for the Saviour has therein shown us the excess of His love by giving Himself to us ;
as the food of
our souls. He is h^re all love, with charity and, uniting
wholly inflamed Himself with us,
;
He
necessarily communicates
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
102
His divine ardor to love God with our whole heart, and our neighbor as our If St. Lawrence selves. laughed in the midst of the flames which consumed his flesh it was because he was filled with the victorious fire of divine love, the fruit of Holy Communion, of to us a portion of
which he was the dispenser. Holy Communion communicates to souls the gift
of chastity.
Holy Scripture
calls
it
bread
of angels, wheat of the elect, wine which maketh virgins. And could the wholly virginal flesh of Jesus Christ be united to our flesh with out communicating to it the germ of virginity? God deigned one day to show this admirable effect of the Eucharist to one of His servants, who saw a ladder of gold resting on the Eucha-
Table and reaching to heaven beside the golden ladder was a lily of dazzling whiteness, the roots of which were buried in the bread of the elect and in the chalice which maketh vir ristic
;
gins. 3d.
The
third fruit of
Holy Communion
is
the
transformation of the Christian into Jesus Christ.
The bread which you
eat, says St. Augustine, but the spiri substance changed your tual bread, which is no other than Jesus Christ,
is
into
;
changes you into Him.
As
iron plunged into a
furnace partakes of the nature of fire, becoming ardent and wholly inflamed with heat, so our soul,
plunged into Jesus
Christ by means of Holy
HOLY COMMUXION.
103
Communion, and penetrated with His
Spirit,
measure transformed into Him the of Christ become our Jesus thoughts thoughts, His sentiments become our sentiments, His words our words, His actions our actions, and in a
is
:
we may
say with St. Paul
:
/
live,
noiv not I :
me (Gal. ii. 20). Behold the fruits of Holy Communion. Now, the more devoutly we receive this divine food the more but Christ liveth in
fully
we
reap these blessed
Practice.
III.
The
Communion according
fruits.
practice or holy use of to the intentions of the
means a frequent use preceded by preparation and followed by thanksgiving. divine Master
A frequent use. It is spiritual food which receive in Holy Communion, and, like cor
ist.
we
it will not suffice to take it once- -we must frequently nourish our soul with it. The desire of Jesus Christ, manifested by the organ of His Church, is that the faithful frequently approach the Holy Table--that is, several times a year, once a month, every week, or often er still, according as each one finds best and his
poral food,
confessor approves.
Remote preparation con s heart from all mortal sin, one purifying and even from venial sin as much as possible. The proximate preparation is made in church by exciting one s self to fervor with the acts of faith, contrition, confidence, and love acts 2d.
Preparation.
sists in
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
104
which can be made
heart or from a
the
in
book. 3d.
Thanksgiving.
When we
receive
Holy
Communion we must remain
at least a quarter to the divine Host,
of an hour in church to speak whom we have the happiness of possessing, and
pour forth our prayers at His feet. What have we not to ask Him for ourselves and for
to
others!
This
.
is
.
.
what
Communion. must extend has
is
called thanksgiving after Holy for such a benefit
But gratitude still
drawn near
The Christian who Holy Table can never
further.
to the
forget the ineffable favor he has received from Jesus Christ, nor cease to remember that he
has been wholly sanctified, body and soul, by the flesh and blood of the
Man-God.
This re
membrance and
will help to preserve from all stain all profanation his thoughts, his affections,
body, and which Jesus Christ has deigned to unite Himself in so intimate a manner. Behold the treasure we possess in Holy Com munion. Let us ask God, through the interces sion of Mary, the grace to constantly draw from it the life, the strength, the consolation of our his eyes, his tongue, all his Senses, his
his soul, to
souls.
CHAPTER
XIV. *
ANNUAL RETREAT. Ducam
earn in solittidinem, et loquar I will
her into the wilderness, and
OSEE
ii.
ad
cor ejus (I will lead
speak to her
heart).
14.
MONG the great means of living a Chris tian life there is
one of which we have
not yet spoken, and which is no less I mean an annual retreat. This will efficacious neither a an nor appear strange impracticable :
thing to any one when he shall have understood the explanation we are about to give.
A
spiritual retreat is nothing but the period of a few days consecrated solely to the affair of our salvation and the great interests of our soul. In colleges and other educational houses there is
an annual retreat
;
many
sodalities also
have
their retreat every year; even parishes from time to time have a retreat, which then takes the name of mission. It is one of the greatest
graces granted the faithful and that those who profit by it cannot vent Christians. ;
To
we may fail
say
to be fer
appreciate this grace, and dispose our105
SODALITY DIRECTOR
io6
selves to
make
S
MANUAL.
a worthy use of this great
of salvation, let us consider,
I.
means
The advantages
of a retreat; II. The manner of following with profit the pious exercises. I. Advantages of a retreat. The advantages and fruits of a retreat are a clear view of truth, a renewal of the spirit, peace of conscience, a
pledge of happiness, a holy preparation
for
death. ist.
flect
A
clear view of truth.
on the
affairs of his soul
Man needs to re and on his eternal
What is there more important? If he destiny. attaches so much value to his body, which is mortal, and to his temporal fortune, which death will take from him, should he not do infinitely more in the case of his soul, which is immortal,
and
his salvation,
eternity?
Now,
which must be in the
his fortune in
midst of the turmoil of
and daily dissipations men ihink only of the objects which strike the senses; they forget completely the things of the spirit and fall into
affairs
Their deplorable neglect of their salvation. the of to the soul, according pro expression phet, is like a land ravaged by the enemy All tke land is made desolate because tliere is none that :
considereth in tke heart (Jer. xii. 1 1). What would you say of a traveller who, going through an
unknown
country, would choose the most agree
path without knowing whither it would Instead of going blindly on his bring him?
able
ANNUAL RE TREA T. way must he not know
the
107
country, should
he not ascend the nearest height and from its summit survey the different routes which lead, some to an abyss, and others to his country?
This traveller
is
man journeying through
the
desert of this world to reach his eternal destiny.
Can he proceed
blindly and at hazard ? Should he not pause to consider his way amidst the thousand paths of this life? It is necessary, then, that he ascend the mountain- -that is, draw near to God by reflection and solitude there lie will see where he is, he will hear the ;
voice of truth, which is that of God, speaking / will lead her into the wilderness, and I will speak to her heart.
to his heart
:
O
holy cells of the anchorites, holy caves of the Thebaid, of Tabena, of Nitria obscure grotto of Mount Pilgrim, which concealed an illustrious princess; wild grotto of Manresa, which sheltered a valiant captain, with what ;
pure light I behold ye flooded! But without going to the forest of the Thebaid we find this luminous solitude in the exercises of a retreat. II. A renewal of spirit. All, even the most fervent, among us need to renew our spirit, ac cording to the words of the apostle Be renewed :
m
the spirit
of your mind (Eph.
that is, reanimate, renew your fervor, revive your spi ritual forces, repair your losses in virtue.
Alas
!
virtue also
is
iv. 23)
subject to decadence, like
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
io8
human things; and if it is necessary at the end of a certain time to restore an edifice, to all
a ship, to repair machinery, to renew pro visions, it is no less necessary to renew from refit
time to time the virtues, the operations, and all the resources of our souls. Without this pre caution we cannot avoid falling into decadence, the sleep of that of death. into
and perhaps even
tepidity,
Peace of conscience. There is no hap piness possible without peace of conscience. III.
two degrees, that of mor and that of tepidity. Whatever our
Interior trouble has tal sin
.
we should
.
.
wish to tranquillize my conscience once for all, and bind myself to the I wish that divine law like a good Christian. should conscience render me the sweet my I am that reconciled to God and testimony state,
say:
I
heartily vowed to His service. rest in peace without fearing the
Then
I
shall
surprise of
death.
IV.
happy
A ?
pledge of happiness. Ah who would not !
Would you be ?
Happiness
is
the natural and invincible aspiration of every human being. Then if you would be happy there
is
retreat.
no better way than to make a good For happiness does not consist in
riches or exterior enjoyments, but in fear of
the Lord, as the words of the Blessed is tJic peatedly tell us :
Holy Spirit re man that feareth
ANNUAL RETREAT. the
Lord
(Ps. cxi.
Now,
i).
-
109
a retreat establishes
the soul in this blessed fear like an edifice
upon Then would you be happy you particularly, young men and women ? Would you have a pledge of an honorable and happy career? Make a good retreat and you will lay the foundation of a fine fu its
foundations.
ture.
...
In obedience to V. Preparation for death. the advice of the divine Master we must pre pare ourselves for death, that we may be al
behooves us, then, to make a preparation, at least from time to time. To this end there is no time better fitted than
ways ready
;
it
that of a retreat.
Then
easy to regulate while under other circumstances, particularly at a time of sick ness, it is difficult, and frequently impossible. Therefore ought we not profit by a retreat We should, par for an action so important? ticularly as every retreat may be for those
one
s
accounts with
it
God
is
;
who begin it the last of their life. Each one This should say to himself at the beginning retreat may be my last I desire to make it in :
:
a spirit of preparation for death. In this way the retreat will be for
preparation for death, proximate
all
a true
for some, re
mote for others. Such are the principal advantages of a spir itual retreat; they show us that it is an excep-
I
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
TO
tional, inestimable
grace which
we cannot
suf
ficiently desire.
Practice. treat
To
we should
fully
reap the fruits of a re
follow the exercises with as
and prayer. Assiduity sometimes exacts sacrifices; there are inconveniences and obstacles to overcome we must foresee them, forestall them, or over come them with a generous heart, remembering Would we not do it is for God and our soul.
siduity, earnestness,
;
for corporal interests ? Earnestness consists in giving ourselves ex clusively to the exercises, setting aside every
it
.
thing which
.
.
not absolutely necessary, listen ing attentively to the sermons, reflecting upon them as they specially apply to our needs, that we may be penetrated with them, and noting is
points which particularly impress us, that
we
may preserve them. We must pray a great deal to the Prayer. Sacred Heart of Jesus, to the Blessed Virgin, say the rosary, assist at Mass, make the road of the cross. It is well also, at times, to ex amine our conscience in preparation for con fession.
Thus we
will reap the fruits of a retreat in
their fulness, and find therein a pledge salvation and a source of all blessings.
all
of
CHAPTER XV. THE PASSIONS
NECESSITY OF CONQUERING THEM.
Spiritu ambulate, et desidcria carnis non perficictis (Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh) -
GALAT.
v. 16.
MONG
numerous shoals which vir tue encounters there are none more dangerous than unconquered passions. The sad shipwrecks which daily precipitate souls into sin and hell are commonly caused by a fatal passion which has become mistress the
of the heart.
The flesh
passions or disorderly desires of the and the senses unceasingly strive to
possess the heart of man; and once they at tain it they lead it into sin, and, through sin, to eternal perdition. It is an intestine war, an interior rebellion in
man
is the revolt of the flesh against the the slave against the master- -a revolt spirit, which began on the day of our first parents ;
it
sin.
Before sin man possessed a tranquil empire over his heart. Not that he was without pas-
1 1
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
2
were not rebellious they were submissive to reason, as reason itself was Such was the effect of the order es to God. tablished by the Creator. Ine empire of the sions, but his passions
human
;
heart belongs to reason it should reign and command the flesh, the senses, and ;
as king
The senses and the passions the passions. should obey reason, as reason, in its turn, should obey God. This beautiful order observed, all is harmony and peace this order disturbed, all is
all
;
Behold what fol confusion, war, and disorder. lowed the disobedience of our first parents the :
passions revolted against reason pride, avarice, sensuality, all bad instincts rose to invade the human heart and reduce it to slavery. This rebellion of the passions is the inheritance of ;
all
the descendants of
In this intestine
two great
classes
:
Adam.
war men are divided one
into
class resist, the other
one conquer their passions, the other bend beneath their yoke. Facing the same alternative, in the midst of the same struggle, what, brethren, shall we do?
yield
Shall
;
we be conquerors
or conquered
?
mas
We
must de cide promptly. Before enemies so vigilant and active there is no hesitating, under pain of be ing surprised by them and subjected to their
ters or slaves of our passions
?
yoke. In order to act with wisdom and prudence
THE PA SSIONS.
1 13 .
let us examine two ques must we conquer our pas sions ? 2d. What are the proper means of conquering them ? Why must we conquer our passions? ist. Because we are men and not vile animals.
in this
tions:
The
grave situation i
Why
st.
deprived of reason, obey the grosser
latter,
instincts of their senses, the
movements of which
are but passions these are the natural guides Not so with man. Created to the of animals. ;
image of God, he has received
for his
guidance
the light of reason, sublime participation of the divine intelligence. It is this, and not instinct, blind passion,
which must direct
his steps
here
below.
For what further reason should man conquer passions? Because unconquered passions destroy his happiness they reduce him to sla very, they debase him, they bring him into the greatest misery in this life and the next.
his
;
Do not the passions reduce man to slavery ? Do they not take away his liberty by subjecting him to tion,
tHeir caprices
and tyranny
?
Once ambi
cowardly human respect, cupidity, sensu
ality take possession of a heart,
they
command
and man must obey. Passion cries, Pleasures I must have pleasures. But the plea sures you ask, man pleads, my reason, my con
as masters
!
science,
forbid. No matter, replies neither reason, conscience, nor God
my God
the tyrant
;
1
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
14
rules here.
command.
I
.
.
And man,
.
be
come
a slave, submits to the exactions of his More pleasures, repeats Passion- -plea tyrant. sures,
amusements, books, conversations, gay so
ciety.
But these books, these conversations,
society,
bid
me
my
conscience,
No
them.
my
my God
reason,
this
for
matter, replies the tyrant;
I
master .... And man, reduced to a slave, bends under the yoke of his tyrant. This is not all; Passion is not satisfied its insa But I cannot tiable avidity claims new food. meet these expenses. I have no more resources, exact them:
I
am
;
my
fortune
is
exhausted,
my
reputation
is
gone,
even my health is compromised these excesses have engendered consumption and death in my ;
breast.
No matter, replies the tyrant
pleasures, any price--at the price of thy for And man, tune, thy honor, even thy life. ;
pleasures at
.
degraded, bends under
this
.
.
yoke and wears
these shameful chains to the tomb. Behold the sad slavery of those
who do
not
conquer their passions! Were they clothed in purple and masters of the world, if they are not masters of their hearts they drag under a brilliant exterior the chains of the hardest servi
tude.
they are more degraded than always a man, but those who their passions descend to the rank of the obey I
go further
slaves.
A
:
slave
vilest animals.
is
THE PASSIONS.
What
is
it
distinguishes
115
man from unreason
? It is not only that animals walk bending towards the earth, while man walks erect, his brow nobly raised towards heaven no, that is only an exterior difference. The true
ing animals
;
difference
is
that animals are
made
for the earth
food which corresponds to the appetites of their senses, while man, made for God and heavenly beatitude, must as pire to this sublime destiny by practising good according to the light of reason and faith. If he close his eyes to this double light, if to obey his appetites and his senses he abandon the
and
the coarse
for
path of virtue, he abdicates his dignity of child of God and though he still walk erect, his brow raised toward heaven, he no less follows the low herd of beings who bend toward the ;
earth. Man when he was in honor did not under stand : he hath been compared to senseless beasts, and is become like to them (Ps. xlviii. 21). This is not all. Not only do the passions ,
reduce
men
make them
to the level of beasts, but they a thousand times more miserable.
An
animal finds his happiness in gratifying the appetites of his senses, because he is made to
Man, on the con who, instead of repressing his sensual in stincts, seeks to satisfy them, reaps only disap pointment, misery, and ruin. Consider the wretched beings in this world,
enjoy this sort of pleasures. trary,
1
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
16
look at the bottom of their misery, and you will discover a passion. There are hearts racked by remorse they have no rest day or night. Is it not a passion which has plunged them into sin the principle ;
of their remorse
?
There are hearts corroded by hatred enmity and vengeance poison their days. Is not their tormentor a passion ? There are unhappy hearts bound by matri ;
monial ties, existences vowed to a life of sorrow. Is it not a passion which has thrust them into this
abyss
?
There are unhappy
families
where there
is
What is neither respect, nor love, nor union. a it not Is the cause? passion? There are families ruined, groaning in misery. What is frequently the cause ? Ambition, luxu .
ry, or
some other
Happy
for
the
.
.
passion.
victims of passion
if
their
woes were confined to this life But, alas most frequently from one abyss they fall into !
!
another- -from temporal misery into eternal. What, in fact, is the cause of all the sin which abounds in the world- -injustice, impiety, in famy? What is the source of this impure tor rent? Is it not a guilty passion? What is it precipitates so many unfortunate beings into hell ? Is it not always a passion ? What causes Is it not souls to abandon the path of virtue ?
THE PASSIONS.
117
usually the same cause ? How many young per sons begin by walking in the path of innocence, and, reaching a. certain age, throw off the yoke of Christ and cast themselves into the path of It is a passion which carries them perdition! away- -an unconquered passion. Solomon, the a guilty passion, left wisest of men, blinded the path of virtue and fell into the greatest dis orders. What lost Judas? passion- -the pas sion of avarice. What in our own day is the "by
A
ruin of thousands of souls
Ah
!
if
hell
Always
?
were open before
us,
passion.
and we were
permitted to ask the unhappy reprobates the cause of their perdition, all, or nearly all, would answer That which caused my ruin, my eter nal ruin, was a passion with me it was pride, with me it was hatred, with me it was cupidity, with me it was indolence which prevented me from fulfilling my Christian duties, with me it was human respect, with me it was lust- -yes, an unconquered passion was the cause of our ruin. Ah my brethren, no one among us, I hope, :
;
!
through the mercy of God and the intercession of His Blessed Mother, will be among the re but if, however, any of us should probates have the misfortune to wander from the right path and end in perdition, that which shall precipitate him into the abyss will be a passion which has become mistress of his heart. ;
Such are the
fatal
effects
of passions
when
1 1
8
not
.
SODALIJ^Y DIRECT: FS MANUAL.
controlled
Cost what
it
by the restraints of reason. may, must we not avoid these
misfortunes ? Let us devote ourselves, then, with courage to repressing our disorderly ap petites is
;
let
our inviolable rule
pleasant, but
what
is
passion demands, but what
my
duty commands.
be,
right;
my
Not what
not what
my
conscience and
CHAPTER THE PASSIONS IS
XVI.
HAPPINESS OF THE MAN MASTER OF THEM.
WHO
Melior est patiens viro forti ; et qui dominatur animo suo, eorpugnatore urbium (The patient man is better than the valiant, and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh cities). PROV. xvi. 32.
F
considered a great king who de people from the yoke of an if he is happy to have chained usurper, the tyrant and restored peace to his country, greater and happier is the Christian who con quers the tyrants of his heart and chains his
he
is
livers his
passions.
He who conquers himself, says a venerable author, possesses the greatest peace ; he sli all be mas ter of the wo>ld, the friend of Jesus Christ, and inheritor of heaven.
This sentence of the Imita
of Christ retracing the noble image of man, master of his passions, indicates the principal
tion
traits of his happiness. Let us make them evi dent by saying that he who conquers himself will enjoy great peace, will advance in the path of virtue, will be powerful in works, will merit the love of God and men.
SJDALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
120
i
Men are
troubled and shaken not but also by the of conscience only by remorse Their im hearts. passions and desires of their moderate desires torment them like a cruel ist.
Peace.
and it has been truly said that man s desires are his executioners. The passions dis turb and shake the soul to its depth like the thirst,
;
furious winds of the sea, they excite storms and Chain these winds, re tempests in the heart.
press these desires, and the soul becomes calm and serene. This serenity of the soul is singularly favo rable to the operations of the mind and heart.
Those who enjoy
will apply themselves with success to the study of the sciences, and particularly to the noble and holy exercise of prayer. Their mind, free from agi tation, resembles a tranquil stream; it is a mir
as
much
it
facility as
ror in which
is
reflected the radiant
image of
the Sun of Justice. important, however, to remark well that if the calm of the passions procures the soul a sweet peace it does not dispense it from vigi This peace should be an armed peace, lance. for the passions are not dead but dormant, It is
chained.
They may awaken,
and,
if
we
rest in
an imprudent confidence, revolt and break their To prevent this misfortune we must chains. persevere in vigilance and prayer Watch ye, and ay says the Saviour, that ye enter not into temp:
y
THE PASSIONS. The
taiion.
spir it indec
weak (Matt. xxvi. 2d.
41). in
Advancement
d
121
willing, but the flesh
is
Our
virtue.
is
evil incli
nations are obstacles to virtue, but obstacles
when conquered, change into means. The most violent passions once bridled become which,
docile steeds, powerful auxiliaries for sanctity. Consider the saints those model men who
shine like lights in the world examine their lives, and you will see that all triumphed over ;
their perverse inclinations their conquered pas sions became so many wings which raised them ;
How, in fact, did they acquire this admirable humility, gentleness, patience, chari ty? Was it not by combating, by repressing the opposite vices and passions? Yes, the hu mility which you admire in the saints is con so high.
quered p ide; gentleness is conquered anger; patience, conquered sensuality; charity, con quered selfishness. All the saints became true disciples of Jesus Christ for having thrown off the old man, as the apostle says- -that is, for hav ing subjected their passions to the yoke of rea son and the divine will 3d.
Powerful
in
works.
The man who con
quers himself will do great things for the glory In the of God and the good of his fellow-men. combat with his rebellious passions he has exer cised and strengthened his will he has so tem ;
pered
his soul that
it
resists all obstacles.
It is
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
122
such a picture which prompted a pagan to say TJie man knows Jiow to conquer his heart, con trol the transports of Iiis anger, raise a fallen ene
:
W^
my and load him
with benefits
man who
can
do these
not only equal to the greatest
men
tilings is
but superior to
humanity*
the
Moreover, God, to
whom
he submits all the desires of his soul, will bless his works with a benediction which is a
pledge of
all
success.
Hence those grand works which we admire Vincent of Paul, a Francis of Sales, an Ig without mentioning a multitude of other generous souls whom we be in a
natius, a Francis Xavier,
hold before us.
He shall merit the love of God and men. master of his passions, becomes gentle, Wan, moderate, charitable. Is more needed to make us loved by God and men? The passionate man is not loved he is feared, detested, for he creates disorder everywhere. Like an animal which uproots a garden to find a few herbs which it seeks, he overturns everything to satis 4th.
;
Be not as a lion in tJiy house, says fy a caprice. the Scripture, terrifying tlicm of thy household^ and oppressing tJiem that are under tJice (Ecclus. iv.
As
passion will not reason and is deaf to remonstrance, the man who allows it to govern him offends everybody, wounds his best friends. 35).
*
Cicero,
Pro
Marcello.
THE PASSIONS.
123
he enters society quarrels and disturbances enter with him. Wherever, on the contrary, the calm and selfcontained man presents himself we behold peace If
and tranquillity established, because moderation induces kindliness, gentleness takes possession of hearts. Blessed are the meek, says our Saviour, for they shall possess the land : they shall possess the land, because they possess all hearts. Holy Scripture calls Moses the meekest of men, and
adds that he xlv.
St.
i).
of God and men (Ecclus. Francis of Sales was the most ami zvas beloved
man of his time, because he was the most calm and the most gentle. St. Francis Xavier, by force of mortifying his passions, acquired such a perfect control over himself, and such winning cordiality and sweetness of manner, that a Japa nese king said he wished to be a Christian, that he might have the happiness of enjoying in able
paradise the society of a man so gentle. Add to so many advantages the enjoyment of
He who frees himself from the true liberty. yoke of his passions to obey the Spirit of Jesus enjoys the liberty of the children of Whosover are led for the apostle tells us sons of God the are the God, they by Spirit of Christ
God,
:
O
incomparable dignity and 14). into the children men of transformed happiness of God Oh sweet is their liberty- -liberty of
(Rom.
viii
!
!
a heart freed from the passions
;
true liberty,
1
24
SODA LIT Y DIRECTOR S
MANUAL.
which no power can chain and which is pre served even in the midst of chains liberty which depends upon nothing" in this world save God; which fears nothing in this world save ;
God and
offence against
God
;
liberty full of
peace and grandeur, a sort of royalty of grace, admirable anticipation of the royalty of glory which must follow it in the life to come. Behold the happy effects of conquered pas sions: peace, great works, the love of God and men, true liberty in this life, a pledge of eternal happiness in the next. Is not such happiness, my brethren, worthy of our ambition? Does it not merit to be purchased with generous ef forts?
we
not willingly sustain the noble struggle against our passions to reap such a precious victory ? Shall
CHAPTER THE PASSIONS
XVII.
MEANS OF CONQUERING THEM.
Spiritu ambulate, et desideria carnis non perficietis (Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh).
GALAT.
v. 16.
OVVEVER
little
we
reflect
upon what
the world, we see clearly that passes the unhappiness of men, of families, in
and of states arises from unconquered passions; and man, to secure his happiness, must bridle passions, mortify them teaching of the Gospel. his
But for
not this very difficult? Is it possible to succeed in mastering my rebellious I answer that it is not only possible
is
me
nature
according to the
?
for you, but that
you are sure employ the proper means.
to succeed if I
you acknowledge it
requires courage, but the difficulties diminish once we employ the proper means. I. The first means of overcoming one s pas sions is to change their object. A skilful pilot makes use of every wind to speed him on his course, because he knows how to skilfully set his sail. Do the same. Instead of a temporal 125
126
SODALITY DIRECT^ RS MANUAL.
object present your passions an eternal object. You love pleasures this passion, fed with earth ly and culpable pleasures, would be your ruin ;
;
but present it the pure pleasures of piety, that hidden manna which contains all sweetness seek the torrents of delight which God pro fix your eyes upon the mises you in heaven ineffable joys of the elect, attach your heart to ;
;
them, and soon the frivolous joys of earth become to you insipid arid wearisome.
will
You
love beauty? Alas! earthly beauty is an ephemeral flower destined to fall into dust at Fix your eyes upon the the breath of death. beauties of the house of
God
;
upon the beau
ty of Jesus Christ, the most beautiful of the sons of men upon the beauty of a soul in the ;
beauty which enraptures the which enraptures the heart of God angels, Himself. Open your heart to these beauties, truly worthy of your love and your desires beauties which neither time nor death can mar. You love riches ? Then amass riches and treasures, but in heaven, where neither the rust nor moth doth consume, and where thieves do
state of grace- -a
not break through nor steal. jj You love glory ? An immortal glory is of fered you give free scope to your ambition, ;
of aspire to the highest rank in the kingdom of of the in the God, kings. King kingdom
Behold objects worthy of your desires and
THE PASS ONS.
127
Behold the true riches which your passions Then raise your you must covet and pursue and heart than these higher eyes worldly joys. !
!
O ye sons you
of men, says the prophet, ho^v long wi// of heart ? Why do you love vanity and
be dull
seek after lying? (Ps. iv.
3).
was by changing the object of their affec tions that the saints so quickly mastered their hearts. St. Francis Xavier was consumed with ambition he pined for glorj^ and renown. A ray of light from on high showed him that It
;
that earthly glory passes like a shadow desired true glory he must give himself to ;
if
he
God
and consecrate his talents to the King of kings. This light struck his mind, and, docile to the
movement of grace, he consecrated himself from that moment to the glory of God and the same passion that he had formerly sought earthly renown. And thanks to this ardor, which was that of the salvation of souls with the
purest zeal, he won for himself a glory which shall never end. II.
The second means
of conquering our pas
combat them face to face. There are times when one must take his heart in his hands and violently constrain and master it as one Avould master an unruly steed. There are inju ries which gall the heart and make the blood
sions-is to
one s veins, there are moments when sorrow and suffering overwhelm the soul, when boil in
SOD LITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
128
pride or wounded self-love rises with what seems an indomitable strength. How, then, is one to maintain himself in humility, in charity, in
How
Christian patience? is one to con these of efforts quer passion save by a more powerful effort of will, of a will fortified by .
.
.
This strength you will draw from the bosom of God by turning your eyes towards Jesus Christ, your model, and towards His holy image. Our Saviour one day reproached one of His servants that she did not overcome all the movements of her heart. What would you, Lord ? she answered my will is stronger than
grace?
;
Place
myself.
you
in the
it
wound
of
will there find strength to
my
Heart, and
overcome your
She followed the advice of the divine Master, had recourse to His Heart, and tri umphed over all her repugnances. self.
III.
A
means
third
against what
is
one
to direct
s
efforts
When David
called the predominate passion. had killed Goliath, the dreaded
chief of the
Philistines,
enemy
is
scattered.
the
all
Among
of the
army
our passions there
usually a chief one, which we liath of our heart. Sometimes
may it is
call
the
ang-er,
is
Go
some-
i>
times pride, sometimes sensuality. Whatever it may be, we must attack and uproot it first, after
which we
shall
overcome the others with
out difficulty. IV. The fourth and
last
means, that which
THE PASSIONS. sums up
all
the others,
is
129
the constant practice
of examination of conscience.
St. Ignatius says that this practice faithfully observed is sufficient of itself to free the heart in a few years from the empire of the most tyrannical passions.
Such are the means
for conquering the pas times to employ them, does not the victory they win us merit the greatest sacrifices? Ah! does not the conquest of the sions.
If it costs at
sweetest liberty, the conquest of a kingdom- -the kingdom of heaven- -merit the devotion of all
our energies and courage? No, you should say, if others in their cow ardice allow themselves to be subjugated by earthly amusements, I will never allow myself Like the saints, to be the slave of my senses. At the like all noble hearts, I will combat. hour of my death I desire to be able to say with / have fougJit a good fight, I have the apostle I have kept the faith. course There finished my is laid up for me a cro^vn of justice, which the Lord the just judge will render to me (2 Tim. :
,
\
IV.)
CHAPTER
XVIII.
SPIRITUAL COMBAT. c&lorum vim patitur,
kingdom of heaven suffereth away). MATT. xi. 12.
HESE the
et violenti
violence,
rapiunt illud (The
and the violent bear
it
words reveal spiritual combatcombat which every Christian
must maintain of the heavenly
to enter into possession
kingdom.
Heaven, beautiful
heaven, was purchased tor us by the precious blood of Jesus Christ, and all men are called there, all can enter there yet all do not enter, ;
for the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and tJie vi lent--i\\Q courageous souls bear it away.
and it must be conquered at the price of courage and combat. He that striveth for the mastery is not crowned What, except he strive lawfully (2 Tim. ii. 5). It is
then,
a
kingdom
is
to be conquered,
this spiritual
combat
?
What
are the
enemies we must combat, and how must we bear off the victory ? I. Enemies. The spiritual combat of which we speak consists in triumphing over the ene mies of our soul, which are three in ntimberthe world, the flesh, and the devil. 130
SPIRITUAL COMBAT,
131
The devil, the spirit of darkness and error, particularly attacks our mind and our faith, which is true light. He seeks to obscure it by leading us to neglect Christian instruction and He goes further: he seeks pious meditations.
our faith by insinuating fatal errors therein, that he may, if possible, rob us of it en To attain this end he unceasingly in tirely. vents numberless errors, which he veils under theories of every form and to spread them he makes use of a double instrument, which, alas! effects his purpose only too well--a railing and impious press, and conversations which are its echo. Behold the first enemy of our soul- -the to corrupt
;
devil
!
The second is the world, the devil s great The world makes the most of the auxiliary. weakness of the human heart and endeavors to beguile and intimidate
it.
It
beguiles
it
with
amusements, theatres, dangerous companions, And applause, promises of fortune. these amusements and promises are so many snares into which fall those who do not hold the eternal salvation of their soul above every flattery,
thing
else.
phantom
of
It
frightens timid souls with the
human
respect, threatening
them
It alarms inte raillery and disgrace. rested souls by showing them the effects of its vengeance in the loss of a position, injured busi Behold the world and its tactics. To ness, etc.
with
its
SODALITY DIRECTOR
132
overcome
we must
it
as well as
its
MANUAL.
S
despise
its false
menaces, brave
even the most violent. harm, for our Saviour
persecutions, can do us no real
They tells
us
promises
its
:
Fear ye not them
that kill the body and are not able to kill tJie soul ; but rather fear him that can destroy both soul
and body
The
into hell (Matt. x. 28). enemy is the flesh- -that
third
is,
ourselves
and our disorderly passions. We understand by passions pride, avarice, and the other capi tal vices of which we bear the germ within us. They are venomous reptiles which breed in the depths of our hearts, and which must be stifled while they are still weak and comparatively harmless.
If
the
life
stifle
slaves,
and
if
we
allow them to
of our souls.
we
grow they will They are unruly
yield to their caprices they
will turn tyrants and reduce us to a bondage which will lead us to eternal perdition.
We
must conquer our passions, we must conquer self; we must conquer generously, and early exercise ourselves in this good combat. But to be victorious how must we combat these enemies?
The
conditions required are
courage and the use of arms. ist. Without courage there
He who heart to
wishes
to
is no victory. close his must conquer
sadness, despondency, or discour agement, and fill it with a noble ardor which is called warlike courage. Courage is inall
SPIRITUAL COMBAT. flamed
at
the
sight
of
133
danger and
by the
hope of victory.
The danger which threatens us is supreme our enemies are powerful and bent upon our eternal ruin. But feeble as we are, we can con quer them, because the Almighty offers us His assistance. Ah if God is with us who shall be against us ? I can do all things, says the apostle, in Him w/io strengthenetli rne. At the same time God offers us only His assistance. He does not dispense us from combating ourselv.es; He wishes that we should exert all our energies, that we should use the arms he places at our ;
!
disposition. 2d. The use of arms.
Now, what are these arms ? First, the sword of prayer, which we must have ever in hand. Then we must cover ourselves with a sacred buckler
the buckler
of the sacraments, which we should frequent. Finally, we must wear the helmet of salvationthat is, faith, which we must strengthen and nour ish by hearing the word of God and by pious reading.
the spiritual combat which we have to are the tactics which will secure such sustain; And the more confidence we have us victorv.
Such
is
/
in the
Queen
of
more complete
Heaven
the
more easy and the
She is the this victory. shall she overthrow our enemy, powerful Virgin; and her virginal foot shall crush his head. will
be
CHAPTER
XIX.
THE TWO STANDARDS. Videte, ne seducamini
LUKE
(Take heed you be not seduced).
xxi. 8.
HE
Christian life is a combat; but to combat well we must above all follow the good standard and beware of al lowing ourselves to be seduced or enrolled un
der the enemy
s standard. Videte, ne seducamini. Christ has raised His standard before the eyes of the universe, and He invites all men to it; an immortal crown shall be the price of victory. In that day, says Isaias, shall be the root of Jesse, who standeth for an ensign of peoples
follow
(Isaias xi.
10).
But before the royal standard of Christ another raised
;
it is
I see the standard of Satan, the
chief of the rebel host.
For nineteen centuries these two standards have floated over the world: on one side is Christ, the true King of mankind, who leads His followers to eternal life on the other Sa;
THE TWO STANDARDS.
135
tan, the prince of darkness, who leads his vic tims to ruin and eternal perdition.
Obliged to choose between two chiefs so dif ferent; does it not seem as if all men must un hesitatingly range themselves under the banner of Christ and fly with horror from the banner of the tyrant who desires their ruin? Alas! they do not act thus. I see mankind divided parties one rallies round the banner of -Christ, the other round that of Satan, and,
into
two
stranger merous.
:
still,
the latter faction
is
the
more nu
Whence is this astonishing division ? Whence that men are so insensate as to wish to fol low the tyrant who leads them, to perdition? Whence is it particularly that they are so nu merous? What is the cause of this folly? The answer is simple we allow ourselves to
is it
:
be seduced. Thus our Saviour has warned us, saying Take heed you be not seduced. That we may not be the victims of a seduc tion so fatal let us attentively consider and en deavor to thoroughly understand the character Let us consider both as of the two standards. they are presented in our time under their form :
and contemporaneous I.
The standard
colors.
of Christ.
The standard
of
Jesus Christ is no other than the cross, the instrument of His death, the sign of salva tion, the symbol of faith and Christian virtues.
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
136
It is Christ Himself who bears this stand ard through all ages He bears it by the hands of His Church He bears it openly before the .
.
.
;
;
universe.
Those who follow it are, first, the pope, the bishops, and all the hierarchy of the Church then all the zealous and militant laity who asso ;
ciate themselves with the priesthood to fight the good fight; finally, all the faithful sin
cerely attached to their faith and their religious duties.
Where does and true
it
lead
its
followers?
To
virtue
world and eternal in the next. This is the end of all happiness the operations of the Church operations which civilization in this
constitute the tactics of the soldiery of Christ. the present day, besides preaching, worship,
At
celebration of the divine office in temples, they include education and schools, a good press, the exercise of political rights, and even the vindication of political rights.
The
particular
character of this spiritual strategy is determined by the manoeuvres of our enemies; we must baffle these
manoeuvres and
fight the
enemy on
the ground where he attacks us. II. Standard of Satan. It is the standard of revolt against God and of seduction to men. It
displayed with a splendor of gold and a thou sand colors, parading in dazzling characters the
is
great words
:
liberty, riches, science,
and grandeur.
THE TWO STANDARDS.
137
borne, not by the horrible Satan or Lucifer -ho keeps himself hidden but by his minis such are ters, his lieutenants, his instruments chiefs the and princes, enemies of the Church, It is
;
of
Masonic lodges; such are also bad bad writers, evil professors for
the
magistrates,
youth. Soldiers rally all
who walk under this banner are gene men who are not adherents of Christ
and who follow the side of evil.
We
distinguish among them, first of all, the declared enemies of the Church then those who join them, who favor their operations or ;
approve of them, whether through weakness, or interest, or indifference finally, bad Chris ;
who Where
tians
desire to freely satisfy their passions. does Lucifer lead his partisans? To
eternal perdition by leading them through love of riches and pleasures to proudly rebel against God. The end of all his strategies and manoeu
vres
is
to destroy the faith in the minds of his substitute a spirit of indepen
followers and
sensuality, and develop this of means schools, the press, and popu spirit by lar festivities opposed to religious solemnities. Such are the means he employs. Behold the two standards which divide man kind into two hostile camps; behold the great struggle, the great duel, of which our globe is
dence, impiet}
the theatre.
7
,
138
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
Which
shall conquer? Shall it be Satan, the or of the evil, Christ, genius King- of justice. The victory is assured to Christ, and all those who remain faithful to Him shall triumph with
Him on the day of His coming. Then the standard of His cross shall appear glorious above the innumerable army of the just the standard of Satan shall vanish. This prince of darkness shall be there with all his adherents, like a rebellious chief with his vanquished army, covered with shame and awaiting his punish ment. Then shall be verified the words I make ;
:
thy enemies thy footstool ( Ps. ci x I ) On one side shall be Christ with the trium .
.
phant just on the other the partisans of evil, the followers of Satan, of Antichrist, confound ;
and condemned to eternal perdition 71iese s hull go into everlasting punishment : but the just ed,
:
into life everlasting (Matt. xxv. 46). which side shall you be, brethren?
On
On
which side would you then wish to be? Ah! doubtless you would wish to find yourself with Jesus Christ and the elect at that supreme mo ment. Then if you would assure yourself this happy fate you must from this moment openly enrol yourself under the standard of Christ you must now associate yourself with His fol lowers by a Christian life you must combat in the ranks of the elect, if later you would tri ;
;
umph
with the elect.
THE TWO STANDARDS.
139
O holy Virgin, them who renderest thy ser vants invincible in combat, obtain for us the grace not to allow ourselves to be overcome by temptation and to never abandon the stan dard of thy Son.
CHAPTER XX. TEMPTATIONS. Fill, accedens ad servitutem Dei stain justitia et timore, et pracomest to para animam tuam ad tentationem (Son, when thou the service of God, stand in justice and in fear, and prepare ECCLUS. ii. i. thy soul for temptation).
HOEVER
would be a true
disciple of
and merit Jesus first must know, reward the promised endure. to have ot all, that he shall temptations of humanity on the are portion Temptations as war is the condition of the soldier Christ, attain virtue,
earth, who finds himself in the
enemy
s
country.
Saviour Himself willed to be tempted to
The show
us that this kind of struggle is inevitable, and to teach us to sustain it victoriously. In order to faithfully practise these divine what are teachings let us consider first of all God per the causes of temptation then why mits them and, finally, how we should conquer ;
;
them. It is not. God who I. Causes of temptation. the is the cause of temptation, but the devil, world, the flesh, and man himself. 140
TEMP TA TIONS.
1
41
not God. The apostle St. James ex us that God is not a tempter of evils, pressly and He tempteth no man (St. James i. 13). It is true that He tempted Abraham, according to It
is
tells
the expression of the sacred text, but
temptation of trial, not of
Our Father
it
When
sin.
was a in the
we say, lead us not into temptation, the meaning of the words is not, do not tempt us, but do not let us yield io temptation^ help "
"
overcome
us to
it.
The cause devil,
who
of temptation is, first of all, the for this reason is called in Scripture
the tempter. He tempts men either by open force or by deceiving and surprising them, playing sometimes the lion, sometimes the in sidious serpent.
.
.
The second cause
.
of temptation
is
the world,
which tempts souls by its attractions, its scan dals, by human respect, by pleasures, riches, ambition, even by the turmoil of business, which causes souls to forget the great affair of salvation.
The
.
.
.
third cause of
temptation
the concupiscence engendered in by the sin of Adam. The flesh
is
the flesh,
human nature is
a source of
temptation, a centre of sin fomes peccati. Finally, the fourth cause of temptation
man
himself,
the liberty
who provokes
w hich he grants T
it
by
idleness,
to his senses,
by
is
by in
temperance, by his rashness in exposing him-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
142
and
to danger, by humoring the desires appetites of his sensuality. self
.
Why
does
God
.
.
permit temptations ?
us, to sanctify us, to
crown
To
try
us.
He
wishes to try us, and by means of the show us what we are and what we can do. Temptation shows each one his weakness and
trial
the
need he has of the divine assistance
it
;
manifests the cowardice and the hidden vices
of their hearts; it sets forth the virtues of the good for the edification of their neighbor. .
..
.
God
permits temptations to sanctify us more and more by purifying us as gold is purified in the
furnace (Wis.
iii.
6),
and by exercising us
in virtue.
Solid virtue
no exercise
is
is
only acquired by exercise, and efficacious than that of
more
Power, says St. Paul, is made per Cor. xii. 9). Baptism, says the Council of Trent, does not destroy concu
temptation.
fect in infirmity (2
God leaves it for souls to combat. piscence This exercise at the same time stimulates our fervor and prevents us from falling into the sleep of tepidity or into a dangerous security. ;
Finally,
God
permits temptations that He to make us conquer They are, in fact, an
may crown us- -that is, a more brilliant crown.
He occasion of merit, a subject of triumph that striveth for the mastery, says the apostle, is not crowned except he strive lawfully (2 Tim. ii. 5). :
TEMP TA TIONS,
1
43
Such are God s views in permitting tempta But in order to correspond to these mer tion. ciful views and turn temptation to the good of our souls we must conquer them. Manner of conquering them. To conquer temptations there are general and particular rules to be followed.
Before temptation take General rules. precautions, which consist in flight, vigilance, Prepare thy soul for tempta fasting, and prayer ist.
:
tion (Ecclus.
ii.
i).
At the approach of temptation, and while it endures, there must be, first, a prompt resist ance
Arrest the beginnings
confidence, that
;
second, immovable
you may never
lose
courage-
He will not faithful, says the apostle suffer you to be tempted above that which you are able (i Cor. x. 13); third, patience, humility, God
is
;
and prayer--^/ degrees and by
patience, with
longanimity, thou shalt by God s grace better over come them tJian by harshness and thine own im
portunity (Imit.
i.
13).
you have remained victo God, and prepare if you have fallen, new for combats; yourself rise again by humble repentance, and at the same time be on your guard against a still more fatal temptation- -I mean want of confidence, After temptation,
rious,
humble
if
yourself, thank
despondency, and discouragement.
SODALITY DIRECTOR
144
2d. Particular
rules
S
MANUAL. kinds
different
for
of
temptations. If you are tempted against faith do not be troubled, do not reason be satisfied with mak ing an act of faith, and quietly think of some ;
thing
else.
Against hope and confidence in God. Consider the goodness of our Saviour Jesus and the red sea of His blood. Against chastity. Beware of being troubled and losing courage, as if it were impossible for you to resist. Fly danger and watch over your eyes. Resist at once, from the very first, with energy and constancy for the salvation of your soul is concerned. Resist with the arms of contempt, prayer, and labor. We must close Temptation to despondency. our heart to sadness and melancholy by recall ing how much reason we have to rejoice in ;
.
.
.
Jesus Christ, by making use of some suitable diversion, by having recourse to some good and pleasant reading or to the great remedy of prayer. Is any of you sad? says St. James. Let
him pray (Jas. v. 13). Destroy the root of sadness, which but a secret irritation of
self-love,
is usually or an unful
and frustrated desire, or an irregular af which binds the heart to a creature. This kind of spiritual darkness and Aridity.
filled
fection
TEMP TA TIONS.
145
do the soul no harm if we well understand that they do not of their nature impede spiritual progress any more than distaste for piety will
an overcast sky impedes the progress of a trav
We
eller.
ble
and
must know how to distinguish
sensi
and
solid devotion, spiritual consolation
desolation.
Fear
in
.
.
.
Consider
Jesus person of the confessor. Consider the consequences of a vain timidity. Is it not better to simply declare one s sins than Is it not to expiate them in eternal flames? better to discover one s weaknesses to one man than later to have them manifested to the whole Christ
world
in
tlie
the
confessional.
.
.
.
?
We
must obey; blind obedience is Scruples. the only efficacious remedy for this malady of the soul.
Such are the means which faith and experi ence itself give us to triumph over different kinds of temptation. By employing them with courage and perseverance we not only shall not the trials and combats yield, but we shall make serve, according to God s designs, to enrich the crown which is reserved for us in heaven.
CHAPTER XXL DEADLY Et (I
vidi de
man
SINS.
bestiam ascendentem, habentem capita septem of the sea having seven heads).
saw a beast coming up out APOC. xiii. i.
N
speaking-
of the disorderly passions
which we have to combat we have said that they were reduced to seven principal ones, which are usually called the capital vices or sins. capital because they are so
seven
the others follow, and so whence the others flow.
The seven
They are called many chiefs which many impure sources
capital sins represent the whole passions, a veritable infernal
cortege of evil
army, headed by pride, the king of vices and sins.
The seven
vices
from
spring
the
three great heart
human
forms of concupiscence concupiscence of honors, that of pleasures, and in
:
These three find, under the
that of the riches of this world.
forms
of
concupiscence we
head pride, avarice, and lust, at the other capital vices; they form three
names of of the
146
DEADLY
SINS.
147
tree, the only root of ill or which regulated self-love, the egotism, inclinations. evil principle of all our These ill-regulated inclinations, taken collec
branches of a cursed is
of the Apocalypse tively, resemble the monster seen by St. John coming up out of the sea to ravage the earth and outrage heaven it had seven heads, which represent the seven capital ;
we
vices of which
To conquer
speak.
this infernal hydra,
which attacks
each of us, we must crush all its heads all, without exception one spared will be suffi Yes, we must de cient to devour our soul. if one rule us it will sins; all the capital stroy cause our ruin if we triumph over all of them ;
;
our salvation is secured. That we may better combat them let us make a few reflections on each in particular.
CHAPTER
XXII.
PRIDE. Superbiam nunquam in tuo sensu aut in tuo verbo dominari permittas (Never suffer pride to reign in thy words). TOB. iv. 14.
mind
or in thy
we must detest and fly all vices we must particularly abhor pride, the most detestable of all. Above all, no pride, says St. Francis of Sales rather than tJiat one.
What,
then,
detestable?
hearts?
is
pride
How
shall
Why
?
we
;
all other vices
is
banish
this vice so it
from our
As an answer
us give you
to these questions let an exposition of pride, with its
remedies and the motives we have for com bating-
it.
What
is pride ? Pride, which is frequent confounded with vanity and ambition, is a tendency to raise ourselves above our merits and our baseness. We may call it an inflation of mind and heart which impels man to arro gate to himself a greatness which he does not It is an inflation of the mind, for a possess. proud man forms a false idea of himself, imaI.
ly
148
PRIDE.
149
gining himself possessed of great qualities and few or no faults believes he is justified in glo ;
rifying himself, while he
thingness, sin
proud man
the
is
and weakness.
only dust and no
An
inflated heart:
aspires to a high place; he de
above others and above his condi he will suffer no contradiction or resist ance. He arrogates to himself a greatness which he does not possess. God alone is man, God s creature, is but dust and great ashes, or rather he is a sinner worthy of all sires to rise
tion
;
;
humiliation.
.
.
.
What further is
The most subtle and pride ? of it vices; insinuating glides, unconsciously to ourselves, into our thoughts, our words, and sometimes into our II.
Motives.
bat pride?
ist.
holiest actions.
.
.
.
must we detest and com Because it is the vice of the
Why
evil one, the spirit of pride, who, having dared to liken himself to God, was cast into the eter
/ will exalt my tJirone above tJie stars I will be like the Most High (Isaias Such was Lucifer s cry, and such 14).
nal abyss of God. .
xiv. 13, is
;
.
.
the language of all his imitators. Pride, the Scripture tells us,
2d.
is
an odious
and detestable vice in the eyes oi God and man Odibilis corain Deo et Iwminibus superbia (Ecclus.
:
x. 7).
The proud man is
benefits he forgets,
whose authority he
detested by God, whose
whose glory he despises.
May
and Lord de-
robs,
the
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
150
stroy the tongue that speaketh proud tilings, who havt said : We will magnify our tongue ; uur lips are o ir ovvn ; who is Lord over us? (Ps. xi. 4, 5).
He
is
detested by his fellow-men,
whom
he de
and whose rights he vio lates. Arrogant and selfish, his aim is to rule, and impose his ideas and his will upon every one, and keep the whole world at his feet. 3d. Pride is a ridiculous vice which renders man foolish and contemptible. How foolish, in fact, it is to glorify one s self because of gifts which are another s hast thou, says the spises, depreciates,
!
W>iat
apostle, that thou hast not received? And if thou hast receiv ^d, ivhy dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it? (i Cor. iv. 7). What folly to for
get that
we
are dust and ashes
head of gold, sor. his feet
him ever
like the statue
of
Had man
!
would never be but
liable to
fall.
What
a
Nabuchodonoclay,
making
folly, finally,
to
imagine ourselves great, distinguished by our beauty, our talents, our ability, when these qualities, as
it
usually happens, exist only in
The sheaves which hold their our imagination heads highest in a field of grain are empty, and the most resounding vases only give forth so much sound because they are hollow within. !
The peacock,
the symbol of pride, in spite of plumage, is no less an ordinary bird with very ugly f, et and a most discordant his
brilliant
note.
PRIDE.
1
5J
a very fatal vice. When it takes possession of a heart it engenders therein all Never suffer pride, said Tobias, vices, all sins. 4th. Pride
to reign in
is
thy
mind or
in thy words (Tobias iv. are told in Ecclesiasticus that
And we
14).
the beginning of all sin (Ecclus. x. 15). Whence, in fact, come disobedience, a spirit is
pride
of independence and revolt, incredulity and im piety, if not from pride which will not submit?
Whence
a soul in subjection to all its pas sions, even to impurity? Because of pride, which God punishes by permitting a soul to fall into this
is
degrading slavery.
When
they
knew God,
St. Paul, they have not glorified Him, but be vain in tJieir thoughts, and their foolish heart
says
came w is darkened : professing themselves wise, they be came fools. For this cause God delivered them .
up
to
God
.
.
shameful affections (Rom. i. 21-26). Yes, thus punished their pride, for St. James
God resistetli the proud and giveth grace humble (iv. 6). IIT. Remedies. To free ourselves from pride, or to preserve ourselves from it, we must, ist, watch over our thoughts and our words, in or der to exclude from them anything that savors of ostentation or a vain complacency in our us:
tells
to the
selves.
Attribute to
2d.
Not
to
cxiii.
us,
i).
God
Lord, but
the glory of
to 1 Jiy
all good name give glory (Ps. :
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
15 2
3d. Never forget the humility or the humilia tions of Jesus Christ. ...
4th.
never
Fear the chastisements with which fails to visit
the proud.
.
.
God
.
Think of our past and our future that of the nothingness whence we were drawn, is, and of the tomb where our earthly career will soon end. 5th.
Think of our actual miserv. If we would ^ banish to easily temptations pride let us con in ourselves the template light of faith as God sees us nothings clothed with existence; poor sinners subsisting solely by grace and the in 6th.
finite
mercy of God,
CHAPTER
XXIII.
AVARICE.
is
Radix malorum omnium
est cupiditas
the root of all evils).
TIM.
i
vi.
(The desire of money
10.
VARICE
is a vice so ignoble that its Let us alone inspires disgust. consider what we must understand by
name avarice, its
how abhorrent
a vice
it is,
and what
is
remedy. I.
As
avarice
pride is an inordinate love of glory, so a passion or an inordinate love for
is
We
the riches of the earth.
say inordinate,
ill-
regulited love, because we can care for the riches of this world in an honest and lawful way. We may have wealth, gain money, in crease our possessions, but our hearts must not be attached to them. The Saviour Himself had a little money for His own and His disci ples maintenance, and there was one of them
We
who was
purse-bearer. may labor, trade, exercise our ingenuity in business nothing is more laudable, provided we fulfil a double con dition, ist. must labor for a Christian end ;
We
:
for example, to live suitably according to our position, to properly rear our children, or even 153
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
154
to increase
our fortune and improve our condi
tion.
2d. Our labor and enterprises must be honest, and our first attention must be given to the ser vice of God. Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and His justice : and all these things shall be added
unto you (Matt. vi. 33). love of riches is ill-regulated; it is immoderate or too solicitous.
A
licitous
ist.
Be
for to-morrow, says the Saviour
When not so be not
saying : What shall we eat, or what shall drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed?
solicitous,
we
2d. (Matt, vi.) riches or seek
When we them
attach our hearts to
for a
bad end
either to
hoard them or to
satisfy vanity or other pas sions. When we seek them by illicit means, such as working on Sunday, excessive and Thus absorbing labor, dishonest enterprises. it would be an ill-regulated love of money and gain which would prompt us to sell ourselves
to the enemies of the
Church
for a position or
any temporal advantage. Therefore it is evident that the name miser not only applies to those who hoard or who are penurious in giving and slow to pay, but that there are
many
others to
avarice clings. One is avaricious
whom
the stigma of
when he makes temporal
possessions the principal end of his existence here below.
AVARICE.
One
is
155
when he seeks riches for not Christian nor subordinate
avaricious
an end which
is
to salvation. is avaricious when he is too much taken with temporal things, when he lacks confi up dence in God to obtain them and seeks them
One
at the
expense of
his soul s salvation.
when he does nothing but accumulate riches upon riches and is never
One
is
avaricious
satisfied.
One is avaricious when he gives nothing to the poor, on pretext that he has nothing to spare, and at the same time is unwilling to re duce his expenses to a just limit.
One
is
avaricious
when he
too severely. One is avaricious
presses his debtors
when he
is
willing to ac
quire money unjustly, or by any means contrary to conscience and religion.
One
is
avaricious when, because of a
wrong
or a pecuniary loss, he hates his neighbor, aban dons himself to despair, or murmurs against
Providence. Finally, one is avaricious when he esteems too highly the goods of this life and prefers them to eternal treasures, contrary to the teach
ing of our Saviour,
who
us: Lay up to your where neither the rust nor moth doth consume, and where thieves do not tells
selves treasures in heaven,
break tJirough nor steal (Matt,
vi. 20).
SODALITY DIRECTOR
156
Detestation.
II.
We
S
MANUAL.
must detest avarice
because it is a debasing and very fatal vice. ist. Avarice is a debasing vice. We despise a miser, and he merits contempt. His heart, attached to earth, has no nobility or great ness. Buried, as it were, in material things, he has no thoughts that are not material, narrow, and base everything with him is a question of money- -he beholds no other thing. In vain do ;
you speak
to
him of
good works, the
virtue,
riches of the soul, the treasures of the mind. He understands you not. The sensual man per ceive tJi not these tilings tJiat are
of the Spirit of Cor. ii. 14). Yes; were he clothed in golden raiment he is still a sensual man animaHe is less than this wholly buried in lis homo. the coffers and metal which he adores, his being seems to be identified with the objects of his
God
(i
:
affection,
and he preserves but the semblance
of a man.
an extravagant vice. Is it not folly to love riches, which are such an obstacle How hardly shall tJiey that have to salvation ?
Avarice
2d.
7
is
idles enter into the
kingdom of God ! (Luke
xviii.
24).
Is
it
not folly to so ardently seek possessions
which death can take from us
How much bear Is
of
all
at
any moment?
his wealth shall the rich
man
away with him? it not folly to hoard wealth, which will be-
AVARICE.
come
the
of
prey
ungrateful
157
and
mocking
heirs?
not folly to leave unproductive perish able riches by which we may gain heaven and immortal treasure ? a principle 3d. Avarice is a very fatal vice Is it
of sin, of crime, of unhappiness in this
life
and
the next.
The
thirst for
money,
for gain impels
men
to
injustice, to perjury, to hatred, to murder. Love of riches leads men to impiety, to for
get their salvation, to forget God.
No man
can
serve two masters, says Jesus Christ. You cannot serve God and mammon (Matt. vi. 24). These
words explain the following words of the apos tle
:
Covetousness
He who
is
the service of idols (Col.
iii.
5).
ruled by a passion for money scru He sells his conscience, his soul, ples nothing. the his God, after example of Judas. is
.
.
.
The man who is
places his happiness in riches insensible to the sufferings of the poor. He
dreams but of sures, as
we
himself, his enjoyments, his plea man in
see exemplified by the rich
the Bible (Luke xvi. 19). The man whose heart is attached to temporal He is ever disquieted and things is not happy. troubled, and
when he begins
to
rest in
his
abundance death comes upon him and robs him of all his possessions. God said to him : Thou fool, tJiis night do they require thy soul of tJiee ; and
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
158
whose shall those things be which thou hast pro vided ? (Luke
xii. 20).
Yes; death comes also to the rich and the But what avaricious Mortuus et et dives.
was the death of the rich man who despised Lazarus? What was the death of Judas, who sold
his
Master?
.
The
.
.
apostle, shall not possess the
Cor.
vi.
says the (i
10).
What
The remedy.
III.
covetous,
kingdom of God is
the
remedy
for
so great an evil ? st. Almsgiving. 2d. The teaching and example of Jesus Christ. Blessed are the poor in spirit, He tells us, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven (Matt. v. 3). i
Make
.
.
.
unto you friends of the
that zvhen you shall fail they
everlasting divellings
(Luke
mammon may
of iniquity, you into
receive
xvi. 9).
the second of the seven ask the intercession of the us Let sins. deadly Blessed Virgin, and watch over ourselves that
Such
is
avarice,
we may ever exclude
it
from our heart.
CHAPTER XXIV, LUST. Fugite formeationem. ^
. Neque fornicarii, neque idolis serneque adulteri, neque molles regnum Dei possidebunt (Fly fornication. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adul . .
vientes,
.
.
terers shall possess the
HE
kingdom
of God).
I
COR.
vi. 9.
seven deadly sins is the one which most dishonors humanity. It is a vice which the tongues of all peoples proclaim infa mous a vice which is the shame of a reasonable creature, a dishonor to the Church of Christ, the pest of souls, the triumph of hell a vice the third of the
lust.
It is of all vices
;
;
very name of which, according to St. Paul, should be ignored among Christians, and we would we were dispensed from naming it be fore the children of the purest of virgins. But as it hides neath a flowery veil, in the shelter it exercises its ravages, we must de the and exhibit veil the monster in its stroy hideous turpitude. Let us speak, then, of im
of which
purity
;
let
dies against
us
show
its
malignity and the reme-
it. 159
160
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
I. Hideousness and malice. Impurity is a vice degrading, abominable, contagious, disas trous in its consequences.
ist. A degrading vice. It is not without rea son that two of the most unclean animals, the goat and the hog, have been chosen as emblems
of impurity, which pollutes and that is noblest and holiest in man.
of
God
profanes
all
The image
imprinted in his soul the thoughts of mind, the affections of his heart; his body, become through baptism the temple of the Holy ;
his
Spirit;
his flesh,
his senses,
all
his
eyes, his
ears, his hands, his mouth, his tongue sanctified in Holy Communion by the Body and Blood of
||
Jesus Christ all are polluted and profaned by the uncleanness of the impure vice. The human creature whom God has raised almost to the rank of the angels lowers himself by impurity to the level of an animal. The sin of a proud man is that of a fallen angel; the covetous man sins as a man the impure man imitates the animal who delights in his uncleanness and wallows in the mire, who has no other ;
instincts but the
pleasures.
enjoyment of the most ignoble
Not only does he .
___
._-
_
.
i
r
_-
follow the
in-
._
stincts of the brute, but he
his
whole
degrades being to the point of losing all sentiment of honor, or thought of God or of death which threatens him; just as an animal sees the com panion sleeping at
its
side led off to the slaugh-
LUST.
and scarcely raises
ter
161
head, but continues
its
its sleep. x{
of
The
Christian raised to the dignity of a child
God by
baptism becomes through impurity
a vile slave- -the slave of the devil and the most tyrannical passions. \After having spent all his means in riotous living he went, says our Sa viour, speaking of the prodigal, and cleaved to one of the citizens of that country. And he sent into his farm to feed swine. And he would
him
fain have filled his belly with the husks the and no man gave unto him szvine did eat:
(Luke xv.
15,
1
6).
An
abominable vice. The fruit of lust is mortal sin, but mortal sin multiplied infinitely and under every form. \ /Impurity, once mis 2d.
<^
becomes a source of criminal and actions, of envy, of hatred, thoughts, words, tress of the heart,
of theft, of sacrilege
^
A
3d.
.
.
.
\
contagious vice.
The impure man
seeks accomplices; he becomes a corrupter of
others.^
goes
;
He
he
we would
A
is
(spreads corruption wherever he a pestilence which we must fly as
death.
J>
vice disastrous in
its consequences, ^4th. the withers flower of youth, poisons Impurity health and life. / It fills hearts with desponden cy and remorse. It robs its victims of honor, mind, and fortune, and their families of peace and happiness finally it leads them to a bad ;
j
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
162
death and eternal perdition. \ largest gate of hell. .
.
is
Impurity
the
.
Such is the vice of impurity. abhor it^/fly from it, and resist
we not with every
Shall it
remedy
? ^ CIL Remedies.
There are remedies against either to cure wounds it has already impurity, made in the soul or to preserve the soul from its stains. The following are the principal re medies
: ^>
The
ist.
triple flight of occasions,
intemperance. 2d.
Love
.
.
idleness,
.
of chastity.
This virtue, the charms
and beauty of which are extolled
in
Holy Scrip
ture, is like the pearl of Christian virtues// It
renders men like unto angels it is the guardian of peace of heart, and becomes a fruitful source of other virtues and of all kinds of good ;
works. 3d.
.
.
.
\
Prayer and devotion to the Blessed Vir Joseph, and our good angel. )
gin, St.
vx
.
.
.
4th. Frequenting the sacraments.
Prayer, mortification, and labor. 6th. Modesty and guarding the senses. 5th.
7th. 8th.
)>
Humility.
>
The remembrance
of our last end and
of the presence of God. 9th. Respect for ourselves, for our bodies, for our dignity. As Christians we should preserve .
.
.
>
our bodies and our souls
in the
most perfect
LUST. purity, for they have been consecrated to in
163
God
Holy Baptism, which made us members of
Jesus Christ, living temples of the Holy Spirit; and because we have been sanctified by the Body and Blood of the Son of God in Holy
Communion.), Behold the remedies and the preservatives of Let us ask the Blessed Virgin, our Mother, to inspire us with a keen and ever-increasing horror for all that
this beautiful virtue of chastity.
could tarnish
it.
^
7*
CHAPTER XXV. *
ENVY. Invidia diaboli mors introivit in orbem tcrrarum : imitantur autem ilium, qui sunt ex parte illius (By the envy of the devil death came into the world). Wis. ii. 24.
HE
fourth of the deadly sins is envy, Let us see in what this vice jealousy. consists,
what
is
the
why we must abhor
remedy
for
it,
and
it.
consists in grieving at the success of others and rejoicing in their misfortunes. I.
Envy
When
tins passion develops in a heart it with a bitter melancholy and an implaca ble hatred for merit and virtue, particularly if these good qualities dazzle or eclipse the en fills it
vious.
The mixture
of these frightful and un
just sentiments forms the proper character of must not confound the vice of envy envy. with emulation, which is the virtue, the senti
We
ment of a noble
heart.
neighbor envy stroy them. ;
is
Emulation
is
a desire
good qualities of our an enemy which would de
to equal, to surpass the
164
165
This vile passion springs from a secret pride
which makes one believe himself lessened by
Hence the very
the elevation of others.
differ
ent impression experienced by the envious at sight of their neighbor s happiness and at If he succeeds they are sight of his reverses. grieved and regard him with an evil eye. If he fails or meets with a humiliation they tri umph with a malicious joy which they conceal in the
depths of their hearts.
Envy
is
the
mark
never to be found
of a bad
in a
nature and
generous heart.
A
is
no
ble heart shares the joys as well as the suffer ings of his neighbor he rejoices in his happi ness and grieves at his misfortunes: Gaudere ;
cum
gaudentibus, flere
cum
flentibus
(Rom.
xii.
The
envious, on the contrary, rejoice in 15). the tears and feed upon the humiliations and
misfortunes of their brothers.
We sin through envy in several ways: ist, by yielding to the evil sentiments which this vice inspires; 2d, by speaking under its influ ence, holding conversations dictated by envy, changing words of blame, criticism, and detrac tion into affected praise, the better to conceal
and insinuate the venom of disparagement and detraction. II. Motives for ist. Envy is a flying envy. base passion which lodges in wicked, ignoble
hearts.
Wherever
it
appears
it is
despised and
SODALITY DIRECTCR
i66
abhorred 2d.
blushes for
it
;
reason that
Envy
S
itself,
MANUAL. and
it is
for this
always seeks concealment. engenders a multitude of sins
it
:
judgments, detraction, malicious joy at sight of the faults or trials of others, hatred, vexations of every kind, frequently even mur rash
ders and the most atrocious cruelties. 3d. It is the crime of the evil one, of Cain, of the brothers of Joseph, of the Jews: Pilate
knew
that for envy they
xxvii.
1
once
of
life
it
as the
;
like rust III.
it
fastens
worm upon
him (Matt,
is
the peace and happiness upon a heart it consumes
does the wood,
corrodes
it
it
iron.
Remedy.
ble vice ly
delivered
8).
Envy poisons
4th.
had
The remedy
fraternal charity,
for this detesta for earth
contempt
goods, and Christian humility.
.
.
.
Should
you yourself the victim of the envy of of manifesting contempt or beware others, which would hatred, only imbitter them you on the should, contrary, conduct yourself with find
;
that humility, that Christian charity which ap peases envy and which overcomes evil by good
(Rom.
xii. 21).
CHAPTER XXVI. GLUTTONY. Quorum Deus
venter est
:
et gloria in
confusione
glory iii.
in their
is
ipsorum,
(Whose God is their belly and whose shame, who mind earthly things). PHIL.
qui terrena sapiunt
:
19.
LUTTONY, is
the fifth of the deadly sins, an inordinate love of food and drink,
or the evil inclination which impels to the inordinate use of food. _fc
man
There is nothing more reasonable than to nourish our bodies with food, provided reason rule our appetite. Reason tells us to use food for the only preservation of our strength and life. If we wander from this rule we are guilty of gluttony, which for this reason is called an inordinate love or immoderate use of food and
drink.
We say food and drink, because gluttony can be exercised in both these things. Glut tony in drink is called drunkenness, or intem perance.
How should I.
do we
we
sin
fly this
by gluttony?
And why
vice with horror?
Sins of gluttony.
We 167
are guilty of glut-
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
168
tony, ist, in quantity- -when we eat or drink to excess; 2d, in quality- -when we nre too eager for delicate or rare dishes; 3d, in our way of eating- -when we eat greedily, or between meals, or without pausing to say a prayer be fore the repast; 4th, because of the end we
have
in
view
when we
eat
for the sole plea
sure of eating, to gratify sensuality when we think only of the table, and speak of nothing ;
but good cheer; 5th, because of the violation of a precept when we transgress the law of fasting or abstinence.
We avoiding gluttony. it a because is detesta fly gluttony, ist, ble vice in the eyes of God, who punished it severely in Adam and Eve, in the wicked rich man of the Gospel, in the Israelites during their II.
Motives
for
must
sojourn in the desert. Yielding to gluttony, they asked for other food, and the meats were still in their mouths when God s anger was en kindled against them. 2d. It is a very fatal vice to man, injurious to It ruins his health, darkens his soul and body. of his heart, forms the sentiments abases mind, an obstacle to prayer and all pious exercises ;
man, becoming wholly animal, perceivetk not the things that are of the Spirit of God. Moreover, gluttony degrades man, as we see from the two animals, the dog and hog, which are chosen to represent this vice. .
.
.
GLUTTONY. Finally, it nourishes lust and sloth. .
.
all
169
vices,
particularly
.
Intemperance particularly has the effect of brutalizing man, whom it converts into a dis gusting animal, so that the ancient Lacedae monians, to inspire their children with a horror of this vice, used to show them an intoxicated 3d.
Intemperance robs man of his reason, his honor, his means; it makes him a blasphe mous, impure creature, a slave, a sinner almost slave.
incorrigible in vice, the scourge of his family, who makes a god of his stomach,
an idolater
and
finally,
except in rare cases of conversion, a
condemned to eternal perdition. Then let us fly all that leads to this deplora
soul
which it is so easy to contract a Let us always love temperance arid habit. sobriety, bearing in mind the salutary warning of St. Peter: Be sober and watch : because your ble
vice, of .
.
.
adversary the seeking
whom
devil, as
he
may
a roaring
devour
(i
lion,
Pet. v.
goeth about 8).
CHAPTER
XXVII.
ANGER. \^..>;
irascitur fratri suo reus erit iudicio
(Whosoever is angry MATT. v. 22.
with his brother shall be in danger of judgment).
NGER,
the sixth of the deadly
sins, is
an
transport of the which to reject with us soul, impels violence anything that thwarts us. inordinate emotion,
It is an emotion that is, an agitation which troubles the calm of the soul, which inflames and enkindles the blood, producing within man
a tempest
which soon breaks
words and
actions.
forth in violent
an inordinate transport, for it is neither ruled nor guided by reason, which should al ways remain mistress of the soul s movements, as a driver must always hold the reins, if lie would not have the steeds run away with him. Anger rejects the obstacles, whether persons or It is
It things, which cross its path. an den to resist unjust aggression
is ;
not forbid
we
are even
permitted to remove any contradiction, when we can do so by lawful means but very often ;
necessary to charitably endure it. Cliarity bcareth all things (i Cor. xiii. 7). Be not overcome it is
170
ANGER. by
evil,
171
but overcome evil by good
What a man cannot amend
(Rom. x
i.
21).
himself or others God ordains other
in
he must bear with patience till wise (Imit.i. 1 6). Anger repels it,
and repels
what thwarts with violence after the man
it
ner of unreasoning animals. It is necessary at times to use force, but it should be used with reflection then it becomes laudable energy. Unreasoning force, the effect of anger, is brute ;
violence.
Let us consider the sins anger produces, the evils it causes, and the remedies against it. I. How do we sin by anger? 1st. Anger engenders a multitude of sins, which are divid ed into three classes: Interior sins--of hatred,
contempt^ aversion, desire of vengeance sins words against God and our neighbor, blas phemies, imprecations, raillery, disputes, de ;
in
traction,
calumny
;
sins
action- -disputes,
in
wrangles, unlawful violence, evil proceedings and injustices against our neighbor. Anger has degrees: it is first simple impa
then it becomes the reach may pitch of fury, resembles the heat of iron, It rage, frenzy. which increases in intensity to a red heat, then
tience, an
irritable
emotion
;
a transport which
to incandescence.
ing with anger, with wrath. .
.
While anger
Hence boiling
the expressions burn with rage, inflamed
.
is
kept within certain
limits,
SODALITY DIR! CTOR S MANUAL.
172
and we are not immoderately moved by it, it is only a venial fault when it is violent and leads us into some great sin against God or our neighbor it becomes a mortal sin. ;
The
II.
evils of anger.
both to him
vice,
governed by
it
who
Anger
is
a
very
fatal
allows himself to be
and to those upon
whom
it
is
exercised.
To him who allows this
passion to govern robs him of his dignity, making him a sort of beast, a surly dog, a vicious wolf, a fren zied animal, a madman ir a furor brevis est. It robs him of all power of persuasion Tlwu art angry says the proverb, therefore thou art in ist.
him-
-it
:
:
,
A
the wrong. moderate like one of the ancients
man who
is
always heeded,
said to a violent
Strike, but hear me. robs him of the affection and confidence violent man is not loved of his fellow-men. he makes himself enemies everywhere.
counsellor
:
It
A
;
deprives him of judgment and prudence. An^er is an evil counsellor ; it leads man astray It
by blinding him destroys interior peace, and even health. It deprives him of eternal salvation by lead ing him to blasphemy and other grave sins. It
It dis 2d. Anger is equally fatal to others. turbs the peace of families and causes the most
deplorable evils in society- -hatreds, murders,
and sometimes disastrous wars.
III.
Remedies. is
more
ANGER.
173
To calm
the anger of others
efficacious than a
peaceful si a sweet or a lence, moderation, kind, modest answer. A mild answer breakctJi wrath, snys the
nothing
Scripture, but a Jiarsli vvcrd stirretJt up* fury (Prov. xv. i). To cure ourselves of anger or to preserve
ourselves from the
vice
we must devote our
selves to the practice of Christian patience, to imitating the sweetness, the humility and si
lence of Jesus Christ, conquering ourselves with generosity after the example of St. Francis de
We must seize the reins of anger, says the holy doctor, and hold them with both hands. I have made a compact with my tongue, he adds we Jiave agreed thit we will never speak while my Sales.
:
And again A sovereign remedy m<)ved. sudden emotions against of impatience is a swiet and mcdest silence*
heart
is
:
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
SLOTH. Multam much evil).
malitiam
docuit
ECCLUS. xxxiii.
otiositas
(Idleness
hath
taught
29.
LOTH, is
the last of the seven deadly sins, an inordinate love of rest, a languor
of the soul, a disgust for the labor of
duty.
We
say inordinate love of rest, for man needs rest, relaxation, just as he does food; but he should seek it only after labor, and as far as necessary to restore his energies. It is a disgust for tke labor of duty. There are
it is
occupations, foreign to our duties, to which sloth itself leads us to devote ourselves. Sloth does not always mean absolute idleness this ;
vice consists also in relative idleness- -that
is,
when we
are idle and slothful in the perfor mance of the labors required of us. Thus, we are slothful not only when instead of working we lose our time in unnecessary rest
or
sleep,
in
chatting, promenading, or also when, instead of
amusing ourselves, but fulfilling
our obligations of prayer and other 174
SLOTH.
175
Christian duties, we occupy ourselves with ex terior things and bodily labor.
must we
Why
are the
.
ness because
this vice?
We
Motives.
I.
What
idleness?
fly
remedies against it
is
must abhor and
idle
fly
a shameful vice in itself
and
fatal in its effects. It is a
ist.
sloth
is
merits
it
2d. It
The name alone of
shameful vice.
he who dishonoring and repellant meets only with contempt and rebuffs. is a source of ennui, and frequently of ;
indignation also against superiors ed to spur on the slothful.
who
are oblig
source of ignorance. a source of negligence and sin. 4th. Because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor Iiot, I will begin to vomit thee out of my moutJi (Apoc. iii. 1 6). Cursed be he that doth the work 3d.
It is a It
.
.
.
.
.
is
.
of the Lord deceitfully (Jerem. riot,
I
fail in
An
injure no one.
It is
xlviii. 10.)
a vain excuse
;
Say you
your duty and you offend God. wicked life, productive of
idle life is a
impurity, evil thoughts, evil conversations, de While bauches, the most criminal conspiracies. men were asleep, says the Saviour, the enemy
came and sowed ness
is
well
cockle
named
among
the devil
s
t/ie
wheat.
pillow.
Idle
He who
abandons himself to idleness does not need a he is a temptation to him devil to tempt him Therefore let the devil find you always self. ;
1
SODALITY DIRECTOR
76
MANUAL.
S
he find you idle he overcoming you, as we see by the sad examples of Samson, David, and occupied, says St. Jerome. will have no difficulty in
Solomon.
The
.
If
.
.
slothful soul
an uncultivated land, a
is
stagnant pool, a rust-eaten plough abandoned in the field. the cause of the greatest evils
It is
5th.
:
loss
makes one despised by men, and brings upon him the chastisements of God. Behold the consequences of sloth. of time, indigence
it
;
The slothful servant in the Gospel who buried his talent is cast into exterior darkness, and the barren tree is cursed by our Saviour and condemned to the fire. II. Remedies. How shall we preserve our selves from sloth ? How shall we combat this
What
vice?
are
remedies
its
?
There are fortunately several
efficacious re
medies. i
There
st.
We
confirm
a spirit of labor, a love of labor. in this virtue by re
ourselves
man
that
membering bird
is
born to
is
born to labor, as the
labor is a universal obtained without labor, while Nothing with persevering labor we can accomplish all is
law.
that
is
things. 2d. The .
My
fly
;
.
Father
v. 17).
.
example of God and of Jesus Christ ivorketJi until now, and I ivork (John
:
SLOTH.
177
The example
of the apostles, of the worldlings themselves, who labor so unremittingly for the goods of this world 3d.
saints, of
;
finally, the example of all creatures. 4th. The thought of our reward
.
eternal rest.
.
.
.
.
and our
.
Let us ask the Blessed Virgin to make us ever abhor idleness and to obtain us a spirit of labor for, in the words of our Saviour, we must work while it is still day : the night cometh ;
when no man can work (Joha
ix. 4).
CHAPTER XXIX. THE WORLD. Nolite diligere mundum, neque ea qua in mundo stint (Love the world, nor the things which are in the world).
not i
JOHN
ii.
15.
HE
ministers of the divine word, charg ed by Jesus Christ to instruct the faithful, speak frequently in the pulpit of the world, the enemy of Christ, and they urge the faithful to fly, to abhor, to trample If this this perverse world under their feet. is but that of the apostles and which language, of Jesus Christ Himself, were well understood and practised with docility, it would suffice to save from spiritual ruin a great number of souls who are lost. Let us on our part endeavor to comprehend it and faithfully conform our selves to
its
teaching.
What must we enemy
of Christ
conquer I.
understand by the world, the ?
How
must we combat and
it ?
What
is
the world
?
By
the world con
Gospel is meant the men of this world, the goods of this world, the false prin ciples and maxims of the world.
demned
in the
178
THE WORLD. The men
ist.
that this
is,
w orld r
of this world, or worldly men seek the things of
who love and and who follow
those
179
maxims; who,
its
strangers to the spirit of Christ, to His hu mility, His piety, His mortification, are animat
ed by the spirit of the world, the spirit of pride and ambition, of cupidity and sensuality, of selfishness and hatred these men walk in the broad way after Satan, whom the Saviour calls the prince of this world. 2d. In the second place, the world signifies the goods of this world namely, riches, honors, renown, luxury, and the pleasures of life. These goods are false, dangerous, and frequent ly criminal. They are false because they can not give us happiness and are too short lived to be of any value to immortal souls. They are dangerous because they lead to pride, be come a source of temptation and occasions of sin. They are frequently criminal, because
they are unjust, like ill-gotten wealth, or cul pable and contrary to the law of God, like the pleasures of impurity- -a vice which too fre quently mingles with the joys of this world and stains nearly all its 3d.
By
meant
the world
condemned
also the false principles
the world. of the
amusements.
These
principles,
in the
Gospel is and maxims of
opposed to those
Gospel, uphold the absolute indepen dence of man, the worship of corporal well-be-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
i8o
contempt
ing,
for the things
to fashion and
of God, servility
Here is how respect. us crown ourselves
human
we may express them: Let
roses to~diy, for to-morrow we shall be no more ! H.ippy the rich ! Happy those who are renowned and attract all eyes ! Happy those iv io
witJi
know how to triumph over their rivals ! Happ.y those who have wherewith to gratify the desires of hearts
their
must
be the
!
We must
do as others do.
friend of Ccesar.
thing, tken virtue.
Piety
is
before every narrowness and an ob
Liberty consists in freeing one s selffrom
stacle.
We
Money
tJie
restraints of the Gospel an t satisfying one s passions. One must follow the fashion. One must be prudent
and conceal his thoughts. Might makes right. These maxims constitute a law which may be called that of the world
Gospel, which
tells
to receive.
those
who
We
opposed to that of the :
Blessed are the poor.
more blessed to give Love your enemies. Blessed are
Clioose the last place.
than
us
It is
suffer persecution for justice" sake. see that the law of the world is the re
verse of that of Jesus Christ; we may sny, then, with St. Bernard, Aut mundus errat aut Christus fallitur--i\}Q
Christ
is
world
not be mistaken,
We
is
in
error or Jesus Christ can
know that therefore we must
mistaken.
attach our
selves to Jesus Christ and despise the world, that ^ve may not be condemned with tins world (i
Cor.
xi. 32).
THE WORLD. II.
world
Now, how
triumph over the combat and conquer it ? are we to triumph over the world ?
How are we
?
How By
we
are
181
faith,
by
to
to
by contempt, by the grace
flight,
of Jesus Christ.
By
faith.
cometJi the
world
ist.
This (i
is
John
the victory which overFaith will ren
v. 4).
der us victorious faith which teaches us that no one can serve two masters, that he who is not for Christ is against Him faith which shows us Jesus Christ triumphing over the world on His cross and saying to us Courage confidence I have overcome the world faith ;
!
:
!
which
;
upon grace to conquer like the the Then confessors, and the virgins. martyrs, let us have faith but the size of a mustard-seed, relies
and we
shall
into the sea 2d.
By
remove mountains and
(Mark
flight.
xi.
Whoever wishes
over the world must
cast
them
23).
from
fly
it-
to
-that
is,
triumph he must
culpable or dangerous pleasures fly its luxury and its vanities separate himself from
fly its
;
;
partisans to associate himself with true, Christians and walk resolutely in the
its
good
way
traced by Jesus Christ.
We must despise the 3d. By contempt. goods of this world because they are false the fashion and the laws of this world because they are tyrannical the promises of the world and its ;
;
flatteries
because they are deceitful
;
the threats
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
182
of the world because the}7 are impotent; the judgment of the world because it is unjust;
human
respect, or the fear of displeasing the world, because this fear is cowardly and un founded. .
By
4th.
which we
.
.
the grace of Jesus Christ. Grace, derive from prayer and the sacra
ments, raises us above the world, enables us to trample it under foot, and causes us to realize these great words
:
Vanity of vanities, and all is Alt flesh is grass, and all the
vanity (Eccles. 2). The grass glory thereof as the flower of the field. is withered* and the flower is fallen, because the i.
spirit
of the Lord hath blown upon
it
(Isaias xl. 6, 7).
God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ ; by whom the world is cru cified to me, and I to the world (Gal. vi. 14). What is
all that
worth for eternity ?
/ am born for greater
How
things
(St.
Aloysius).
(St. Stanislaus).
when I contemplate Such are the means of
base the earth appears
heaven
! (St.
Ignatius).
triumphing over the world.
who
Honor
to those
achieve this beautiful victory They are great in the eyes of God and men they are happy as well, and enjoy the sweet liberty of !
;
the children of
God
This victory shall be ours the Blessed Vir gin Mary, our Mother, will obtain us the grace and strength to despise vanity and trample the world under our feet. ;
CHAPTER XXX. DOUBLE PRINCIPLE OF CONDUCT DUTY AND NATURAL INCLINATION. .
In quo cortigit adolescentior viam suam ? In custodiendo sermones tuos (By what doth a young man correct his way ? By observing thy words). Ps. cxviii. 9.
HEN
I
consider the world
I
see
men
going through life by a thousand dif ferent paths, which soon are concen trated into two very opposite ways one is call ed the broad road and the other the narrow ;
At the beginning of life men begin to road. separate into two classes which follow one or the other of these ways. That which deter mines their course is the diversity of principle and motive which influences them one follows :
the principle of duty, and the other natural in clination, the instinct of interest, ambition, pleasure, or amusement.
Let us consider the nature and consequences
two
of these
of duty
;
II.
I. Principle principles of action The principle of natural inclina :
tion. I.
Principle of duty.
We act ts
through a prin
184
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
ciple of duty when we do, not what pleases us, but what is right not what we would like to do if we consulted our natural inclinations or our passions, but what God requires of us, what our parents, our masters, and our supe ;
what honesty and justice require of us in a word, what our conscience commands and prescribes. Such is the rule, the principle of duty and it is the true rule of human life, the true principle which should guide us an honorable, invariable, and everriors require of us,
;
victorious principle.
An
honorable principle. The finest eulogium you can bestow upon a man is to say, He fulfils all his duties, for it is affirming that he ist.
irreproachable in everything, that there is neither fault nor weakness in him, that he is Whatever this man may be, a perfect man. whatever his social position, were he the poor
is
provided he fulfil his duty, not only need he blush before no one, but he has a right to the respect of all men, and he is more truly honorable than the rich and noble of this world, who, under a brilliant exterior, too frequently conceal shameful vices or base negligence. Whoever acts through duty is sheltered from blame. He may dissatisfy certain minds and provoke unjust complaint, but he can never be censured for doing his duty. All honest minds must do him justice and give him praise.
est laborer,
DUTY AND NA TURAL Finally, the line of
duty
INCLINA TION.
is
1
85
the rule of a rea
sonable man, the golden line of truth and wis dom to follow it faithfully is to walk in honor ;
God, before men, and before
before
his
con
science.
Invariable principle.
2d.
In following the
duty one is always consistent with him always equal to himself, because he obeys
line of self,
a principle as invariable as truth. Interests, tastes, passions, change like the winds and clouds duty,- like the sun, never changes. Hence follows constancy, the grand condition of success in all enterprises. No illusion, no ;
man who acts through a prin he pursues his course, not like comes and goes, but like the in
obstacles arrest a ciple of duty the idler who
;
trepid traveller who, indifferent to the varia tions of the atmosphere, to the curiosities of the
countries through which he journeys, thinks only of continuing the route which leads to his The course of him who is guided destination.
by duty
way
is
train
as direct and fixed as that of a rail
moving on
doned
one
its
iron track
;
without
only a helpless baxk aban to the impulsion of every wind and tide.
this principle
is
A
victorious principle. Do you desire success, happiness, peace, as far as it is possible to possess them here below ? Have duty al 3d.
ways in view. Thus you shall always have equity and justice before you. Now, justice is
1
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
86
the great principle of prosperity and success, as well as the pledge of benedictions from above. Justice exalteth a nation : but sin maketh nations The tJirone of a king miserable (Prov. xiv. 34). shall be established with justice (Prov. xxv. 5). Blessed is the man whose will is in the laiv of the
duty. He shall be like a tree which is planted near the running ivaters, which shall bring forth its fruit in due season, and his
Lord
that
is,
in
Not thus is it leaf shall not fall off (Ps. i. 2, 3). with the unjust and fraudulent man Non sic impii, non sic. By fraud or violence, by unjust :
or underhand means, he may attain power or but his prosperity, built upon sand, it will crumble and shall not endure bury him fortune
;
;
in its ruins.
Ill-gotten fortune
is
a heap of sand
which the breath of the storm shall disperse. True happiness, which consists particularly
in
the peace of a good conscience, is the natural fruit of accomplished duty. pleasant it is to be able to say / have done my duty !
How
How
:
consoling to hear in the depth of our heart this testimony of the Holy Spirit Thou hast done :
what tJiou sJiouldst do. I am content with thee. Another source of happiness is the merit of actions performed through a principle of duty. No actions are void before God all being ac complished for Him and for His service will be ;
rewarded by Him.
Therefore ineffable will be the satisfaction of a man at the judgment-seat
DUTY AND NA TURAL who
has utilized
all
his
INCLINA TION. moments.
187
Looking
back upon the past, he shall see that all his days were complete, for they were given to the ful He filment of his duties and the will of God. / have fought a good can say with St. Paul :
I have
fight,
faith
:
there
finished my course, I have kept tlie laid up for me a crown of justice
is
which the Lord the just judge will render me and with the Saviour Himself: (2 Tim. iv. 7, 8) / have finished the work which tliou gavest me to ;
do (John xvii. 4). Then we must engrave in our heart the vital principle of duty and the golden rule which springs therefrom, What is
and
right,
not
what
may
is
pleasing ; and this
Do what
noble souls,
of
is
right,
maxim
come what
!
To
Natural inclination.
II.
tural
inclination
taste,
humor,
which
is
tive, it
is
to
interest,
follow one
s
na
act
through caprice, or any other motive
not that of duty.
Whatever the mo
proceeds originally from a triple prin
ambition, interest, pleasure or amuse Each time we act through a motive of amusement, ambition, or interest we are obey ing a natural inclination, which we thus make ciple
:
ment.
the principle of our action. Now, this principle is base and
unworthy of
man
it
;
it is
versatile
and unstable
;
is
very
fa
tal. ist.
A
principle base and
unworthy of man.
1
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
88
Man
should be guided by reason, and not by
after the manner of animals. possessing neither light nor intelli gence, have nothing to guide them but their senses and their grosser instincts but man, en lightened by a ray of divine light, sees before
blind
The
instincts
latter,
;
him
a nobler path in which he must walk. If he close his eyes to this light and follow but the bent of his natural inclinations, he lowers himself to the rank of the animals and becomes like unto the brute. Look at an animal press ed by the appetites of his senses, he falls upon the first prey which meets his eye he grows in censed if it be disputed with him he eats, he drinks in all places and at all times he runs, he sleeps according as he desires. Such is the ;
;
;
;
man who flesh
the
ed
is guided only by the inclinations of and blood. Man when lie was in Iwnor, says
Holy to
Spirit, did not understand ;
senseless
beasts,
and
is
lie is
become
(Ps. xlviii. 13). 2d. versatile principle.
A
There
more changing than natural
compar
like to tJicm
is
nothing
inclination, pas
That which pleases you to-day that which fa you to-morrow; in a word, human things change like the clouds of the sky, like the wind which impels them in every direction. Such is also the mobility of our temporal interests and our tastes, and such shall
sion, interest.
will be displeasing to-morrow vors you to-day will thwart
;
DUTY AND
A^A
TURAL INCLINA TION.
189
consequently be the mobility of one who is One while he will respect guided by them. he will apply himself to labor, and an religion, other while he will give himself up to sloth, abandon piety and virtue he is a reed, a leaf moved by every wind, a weather-vane turning ;
in
every direction.
Whence
is
this mobility,
this inconsistency, as ridiculous as
it
is
deplo
From
the principle which guides him, or rather from the absence of principle for, properly speaking, he is what is called a man
rable?
;
without principle. What becomes 3d. A very fatal principle. of a bark without a helm in the midst of the ocean ? Abandoned to the mercy of the winds and waves, it first becomes their sport and then is dashed upon a rock or swallowed up in the
Behold the image of man freed from abyss. the restraints of duty his life will be vicious, ;
unhappy, and his end evil. Obedient to his natural propensities, too fre quently opposed to the requirements of duty and the law of God, such a man commits sins arid faults without number, and contracts the habit of all vices His ways are filthy at all times His whole life is dragged through (Ps. x. 5). mire and filth. :
You will urge, perhaps, that all propensities are not bad nor all amusement sin, and that you only aspire to amuse yourselves
in a be-
SODALITY DIRECTOR
S
MANUAL.
We
do not speak here of honest amusements, which are in reality lawful relaxations but of that way of living which has no other rule than amusement and what is call ed a life of amusement and pleasure. Such a life can never be innocent nor Christian. And, moreover, even supposing it exempt
coming manner. ;
from great disorders, what merit would it have Is it not at least sterile for eter for, heaven? nity
?
And
if,
as Jesus Christ teaches,
we
.must
render an account of every idle word, what shall it be when we must account before the tribunal of God for a whole life which shall have been idle ? In following the bent of his inclinations man seeks here below happiness and pleasure but he will find only disappointment, and in the depth of his heart emptiness and weariness. Walking in the broad way which leads from God, he has pursued troublesome ways and he knew not the way of peace. Et viam pads non ;
cognoverunt (Ps.
And where
xiii.
3.)
does he end ? In death, Yes, a life of pleasure passes
finally
inevitable death.
and ends in death. But in what a death! O DeatJi, says the Holy Spirit, how bitter is tJie remembrance of tJiee to a man like a life of duty,
wJio has peace in his possessions (Ecclus.
He must These
leave
all
xli.
i).
that he has loved so much.
riches, these pleasures, these
honors
es-
D UTY AND NA TURA L INCLINA TION. cape him all omnia ;
sierunt
his joys are itla
passed away
(Wisdom
v.
9).
:
1
91
Tran-
He
sees
his blessings vanish like smoke and, what is more bitter still, he sees his whole life devoid ;
of virtues, filled with sins
;
it
is
a chain of
ini
quity which he must drag after him, and with which he is about to appear before the throne of God. What a death was that of the sensual man of The rich man also whom our Saviour speaks died, and Jie was buried in hell (Luke xvi. 22). Behold the fatal term of a life of pleasure into which one is led who allows himself to be !
guided by
his natural inclinations instead of
following the noble principle of duty. Then must we not, cost what it may, inviola bly fulfil our duty, be guided by a principle of duty, in order to lead an honorable and happy life which shall be crowned by the death of the just?
CHAPTER XXXI. SINS OF
THOUGHT AND WORD.
Si quis in verbo non offendit, hie perfcctus est vir (If any man offend not in word, the same is a perfect man). JAMES iii. 2.
VERY
simple
means of
acquiring
so pre purity of conscience, which is cious in the spiritual life, is to watch over our words, that we may utter none which may be criminal or reprehensible before God.
We
if
have the testimony of the Holy Spirit that
we do
If any
not sin in word we shall not sin at all n offend not in word, the same is a per
:
m
man (James, iii. 2). The expression, in word, should extend not
fect
but only to the exterior expression of thought a veritable also to the thought itself, which is Moreover, interior expression of the mind. united so are words and intimately thoughts
one are good the other are equally so. rigorously observe the rule of the avoid sins of Spirit we must endeavor to of word. and sins thought To this end let us try to well understand one
that
if
Then Holy
to
and the other. 192
SIATS
AND WORD.
OF THOUGHT
193
We
understand by sins I. Sins of thought. of thought not only representations and judg ments of the mind, but also desires and affec tions of the heart contrary to the law of God. They relate either to God, or our neighbor, or ourselves.
Sins against God--doubting the truths
ist.
murmuring interiorly against Provi rebelling against the divine will in try ing events, and enduring them with impa tience despairing of one s amendment or sal of faith
dence
;
;
;
vation
rejoicing in outrages against religion or the church by witnessing impious specta cles, or in any other way. ;
.
Sins against our
2d.
.
.
neighbor
suspicions, rash judgment; feelings of envy, of aversion which we sometimes nourish even against our superiors; anger, rancor, hatred, desires of ven
geance, evil wishes against our neighbor^ malicious pleasu?~e at sight of his misfortunes or his sins, coveting his goods or his posi tion.
.
.
.
Sins against ourselves- -feelings of pride or vain complacency contempt for others 3d.
;
;
ambitious thoughts and desires, impure aginings, shameful thoughts and desires.
We
must observe here that we
sin
im .
.
.
by these
bad thoughts only in as far as we consent to them. The thought, says St. Bernard, cannot injure ns as long as
we do
not consent to
it.
But
SODALITY DIRECT FS MANUAL.
194 if
it
souls
be voluntary it stains the purity of our Hcec sunt quce coinquinant komimm (Matt. :
Then we must repel them at once without hesitation, and unceasingly watch over our senses and our heart that they may not en ter, and avoid idleness and evil conversations, xv.
20).
wliich give rise to evil thoughts. II. Sins of word. Nothing is easier than to offend in words; therefore the prophet ad
dresses this prayer to God Set a watch, before my mouth, and a door round about :
O Lord, my
lips
Melt down thy gold and silver, and make a balance for thy words and a just bridle for t/iy mouth (Ecclus. xxviii. 29). (Ps. cxl.
3).
The Creator
has
endowed
us with the gift of
speech to praise His divine Majesty, to confess our sins, to ask of God what we need, to edify
our neighbor by communicating to him salu tary knowledge, finally that we mav some times experience in friendly intercourse the agreeable pleasures of honest relaxation. .
Now, we
this noble gift for
received we abuse
.
it,
and
we
it
sin
particularly when useless or culpable
by uttering words against God, or our neighbor, or our
selves.
Such are ist.
lent.
.
words when we fail to use the end for which we have
offend in
:
Words
uttered
when we should be
si
THOUGHT AND WORD.
SINS OF
Words which
2d.
unbecoming.
.
.
are indiscreet,
195
ill-timed,
.
3d. Blasphemies. 4th.
Words
6th.
Lies.
ridiculing sacred things, and impious discourses. 5th. Arrogant and vain words.
or
persons
7th. Murmurs and other words contrary the fourth commandment.
to
Hard, angry, injurious words, sharp and
8th.
scoffing words. 9th. Detraction, calumnies, and concerning the faults of the absent.
words
all .
.
.
Immodest, indecent words, licentious and obscene songs. What must we think and say of one who indulges in obscene conversations, and how should we conduct ourselves towards him? loth.
A
shameless, immodest himself and shows that he
speaker dishonors is an unchaste man, an enemy to God, to his neighbor, and to him Let him not urge that the end of self. his discourse is but to excite laughter, to amuse .
his
Ah
.
.
companions that it is mere badinage. murderous tongue, thou dost assassinate ;
.
.
.
!
souls,
hearts,
What! mortal
thou plungest a poniard into innocent laughter, to amuse thyself. thou committest the most abominable to
excite
sins,
thou damnest thy own soul with which thou plungest into hell as
that of others,
SODALITY
196
MANUAL.
DIRECTOR" S
Thinkest thou such crimes fitting- for ? Ah if thou dost laugh it is with the sataoic glee of Satan over his prey. If it happen that we have the misfortune to meet with one of these shameless, unchaste, obscene tongues what must we do ? How must we bear ourselves? Above all beware of a jest!
laughter
!
taking part in the immodest discourse in any way, either by laughing at what is said or even If no one listened to immo would not be uttered. Are you at the head of a family ? Suffer no indecent word to be uttered in your house. Would you
by
listening to
dest discourse
it.
it
suffer the presence of a tiger, a serpent, a thief, an assassin ? Wherever you encounter it .
.
fly
from
would
To
.
as from a pestilence or a traitor plunge a poniard in your breast. it
.
.
who .
avoid sins of words
be prudent in the choice of your friends have no intercourse but with those who respect themselves in their conversations and remember that your tongue has been twice sanctified- -first by the salt of baptism, then bv the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ in Holy Communion. ;
;
.
.
.
*/
O
Holy Virgin, pure and immaculate ther! obtain for me the grace to govern tongue and to
my
my
thy example, holy and words.
be, after
irreproachable in
Mo
CHAPTER
XXXII.
MORTAL AND VENIAL Iniquita
em
odio habui, et abominatus
abhorred iniquity).
jATRED is
Ps. cxviii.
SIN.
sum
(I
have hated and
163.
abhorrence of all that iniquity, form the basis of
for sin,
called
true virtue, of the Christian the
word
mortal
life.
By
we must understand
iniquity sin but also venial sin
other are an abomination
in
;
not only one cind the
the eyes of
God
;
one and the other are sovereignly fatal to man and bring upon him the greatest evils. In order to conceive an ever-increasing horror for both let us make a few reflections on mortal sin and venial sin. I. Mortal sin. If God strikes mortal sin with all His wrath, if He punishes it with the eternal torments of hell, it is because mortal sin in His eyes includes a supreme malice which deserves all the rigor of His justice. God sees this terrible evil as it really is, hence His maledictions, His anathemas, His wrath man sees it but obscurely, hence his indiffer;
IQ7
SODALITY DIRECTOR
198
S
MANUAL.
Ah if he ence, or even his affection for sin. were to see it with God s eyes, by the light of faith, he would conceive a hatred of it which !
w ould grow
deeper and deeper. What, then, is mortal sin ? What
of mortal sin
is
the state
?
ist. Mortal sin is a grave violation of the law of God. By mortal sin man insults his Creator by preferring a creature to Him he tells Him in actions, if not in words, / will not ;
serve.
Such is the m mstrous act which is called mortal sin; it is an injury launched against God like an arrow launched against heaven it is at the same time a fatal blow given by the sinner to himself and which strikes his soul with death. He thit Lvctk iniquity kateth his ;
own
soul (Ps. x. 6). The act passes, but its effect remains
2d.
;
it
leaves the soul wounded, in a state which is called a state of mortal sin-- ^ fatal state, in 1
which
it
remains as long as the
sin is
unpar-
doned.
What, then, is a state of mortal sin? It is a state of death, of slavery, of perdition. state of death. The soul struck by mortal
A
instantly loses that interior life which is called sanctifying grace, and in the eyes of God is but a lifeless corpse, destined to be
sin
buried in
hell.
The rick
man
died and was
MORTAL AND VENIAL
SIN.
199
It is without life admitted by an ex ceptional order of Providence it would be un
buried in lull (Luke xvi. 22). for heaven,
where were
able to see, or taste, or
it
comprehend any
of
its
In fact, sanctifying grace being the superna tural life which God has given the soul to en
able
it to live for heaven, deprived of this life incapable of enjoying or seeing the eternal light of heaven, as a dead body is of seeing the Moreover, deprived light of the sun on earth.
it is
of grace, which is not only its life but the prin ciple of its merits, it becomes sterile like dead
incapable of producing any work meritorious for heaven. Finally, deprived of
wood, and
is
appears in God s eyes a lifeless This is corpse. why the Saviour called the PJiansees wJiited sepulchres full of dead men s bones and of all filthiiiess. The soul, being but a must be and buried in the tomb buried, corpse, of souls, which is hell. The rich man died, says beauty,
it
Jesus Christ, and he was buried in hell (Luke xvi 22). State of slavery. The soul by mortal sin throwing off the yoke of obedience and the ser vice of
God
falls
into the slavery of the devil
and her own passions.
now who
Formerly God reigned
who possesses her as holds her master, chained, 1o drag her into hell as soon as death shall permit him. Mean-
in
her
;
it is
the devil
SODALITY DIRECTOR
200
S
MANUAL.
while he tyrannizes over her, urges her on from confirms her more and more in her evil habits, estranges her from piety, from
sin to sin,
prayer, from all religious exercises, for fear she may escape him by a sincere conversion. In sickness particularly he makes every effort to
prevent
her receiving
the
sacraments
in
impenitent and be may come his prey in hell, where he subjects her to an eternal slavery a thousand times more time, that
she
die
terrible.
State of perdition. trampling the law of to say to
Him, /
The moment God under his
will not serve
the sinner, feet, dares
Thee,
God
an
The of eternal punishment. then condemned to hell, and if he does not go there at once it is because God grants him a delay to do penance; when this delay ex pires the sentence of divine Justice is inevi
swers by a decree sinner
is
tably executed. The state of this unfortunate soul resembles that of a criminal
man
condemned
justice and shut up
fixed for his execution.
difference: ble,
while
in
by hu day however, a
to death
prison until the
There
is,
human
God
justice in this case is inflexi accords pardon to sincere re
Moreover, the victim of human jus dreams only of his sad state, while the vic tim of divine Justice too frequently forgets and abandons himself to mad pleasures.
pentance. tice
MORTAL AND VENIAL
201
SIN.
Man
in a state of damnation or mortal sin is Damocles, who, seated at a royal banquet,
like
believed himself the happiest of mortals, while a hair over his head.
sword was suspended by a
The sinner in a state of damnation also re sembles an unfortunate creature who in a state .
.
of
.
intoxication
track.
.
.
.
falls
upon a railroad compared to a tree
asleep
Finally, he
is
which the woodmen endeavor to
fell
with an
axe, while others drag it by a rope fastened to its top the tree will necessarily fall to the side ;
where the rope is. Such is the terrible
Sus
state of mortal sin.
pended over the abyss of hell by the fragile thread of life, liable to fall therein at any mo ment, what peace can the unfortunate sinner ? There is no peace to the wicked, saith tlie
know Lord
Why
(Isaias xlviii. 22).
is it, nevertheless, see worldlings rejoicing and vaunting their happiness ? Ah their joy is wholly ex
that
we
!
terior; only an intoxication of the senses. Peace of conscience is unknown to them they are full of trouble interiorly, or they have suc ceeded in stifling their remorse, the repose it
is
;
they enjoy
is
asleep in the
Ah may
that
of the animal which
falls
shambles.
they wake from this sleep of death. Surge, qiii dormis, et exsurge a inortuis (Eph. v. Let us, as Children of Mary, have an ever14). increasing horror of mortal sin, that, with the !
SODALITY DIRECTOR
202
assistance of our
S
MANUAL.
good Mother, we may never
into this deplorable state.
fail
It is not sufficient to fly Venial sin. mortal sin we must also most carefully avoid II.
;
venial sins.
Because venial
Why?
sin, as
it
appears by the light of faith, is not a trifling matter but a very great evil a great evil in it self,
a great evil to us.
Venial sin in itself is not a light fault if thus it is only in a relative sense and by comparison with mortal sin. Venial sin considered in its malice, and as it appears in the eyes of God, is an evil greater than all the i
we
st.
;
call it
we must suf commit it. It is an
evils of the natural order, so that
rather than fer everything*-^ ^
evil so great that not for anything in the world, effect the greatest good, should I dream
even to for a
moment
What,
of committing it It then, is venial sin ?
is
a violation of
the divine law which does not destroy sancti fying grace in our souls, but which is no less
an injury to God, a work of the devil, a pro duct of hell, a disorder opposed to the divine attributes as darkness is to light, and conse quently an abomination in the eyes of God. Hence the saints horror of venial sin; hence the grief of St. Aloysius fainting at the feet of his confessor.
To its
better judge of the evil let us consider
chastisements.
A
curiosity which
seemed
M:RTAL AND VENIAL
SIN.
203
very pardonable drew upon Lot s wife a most The Bethsamites were striking punishment. in with death for hav numbers, great punished, the Oza the Levite, for looked ark. upon ing touched it under circumstances which having would seem to excuse the violation of the law,
was
also struck dead.
David, for ordering the census of his people to be taken through a mo tive of vanity, drew upon Israel the scourge of a pest which carried off seventy thousand men.
What
we say of purgatory, where venial be still more severely punished in its expiating flames? The fire, says St. Augustine, which purifies the elect in purgatory is like shall
sins shall
which tortures the reprobates
that
A great which
in hell.
Venial sin is a leprosy our souls and deprives them of
evil to us.
stains
that
It purity so necessary for Christians. us from in virtue and en prevents advancing
joying the consolations of the Holy Spirit.
It
weakens our souls and disposes them to fall into tepidity, and even into the abyss of mor tal
sin.
It
merits the severest chastisements in this life or the
which we must undergo next.
Since venial sin is so great an evil in the eyes of faith, should I not endeavor to combat it with all my strength? To this end I must avoid all those faults which are called delibe rate,
which are wittingly and knowingly com-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
204
and to which we may apply these words of the Holy Spirit He that contenmeth sm ill things shall fall little by little (Ecclus. xix. The most practical and efficacious means i.) mitted,
:
of avoiding it is daily examination of science and generosity in conquering one s Vince
te if sum
Conquer
thyself.
con<
self-
CHAPTER
XXXIII.
PREDOMINANT FAULT. Non
ptignabitis nisi
contra
not fight but against the
regem
King
of
Israel so him Israel).
3
(You KINGS
shall xxii.
31-
UCH King
was the order given by the King
of Syria to his soldiers as they were about to attack the army of Achab, of Israel. Direct all your darts, he said to
them, against the king it is him whom I must conquer. The king was killed, in fact, and all It is thus we must act his army dispersed. ;
against our predominant fault, our predomi nant passion we must concentrate all our ef ;
forts against
He who soon
finds
enemy
;
obstacle
it.
desires to walk in the path of virtue a great obstacle in this interior
but
we
the predominant passion is an may also say that a sure means
if
of advancing in virtue
quer
is
to
combat and con
it.
In war victory depends less upon the num ber and courage of the soldiers than upon the ability of the commander and his strategy of 205
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
206
war
;
in like
manner the most
efficacious
of conquering our vices and our faults faithful application of a good method.
means is
the
Now,
the best method, that which was followed by all the saints, is to fight our predominant fault,
predominant passion, with generosity. What must we understand by a predominant passion? How must we triumph over it?
L What is a predominant passion ? We un derstand in general by a predominant passion that one of our evil inclinations which has most bear in our heart the empire over us.
We
of
passions, but usually there is one which rules us and which is the root of all our faults. In one it is anger. He is rous ed at the least contradiction if anything dis pleases him he breaks forth into angry words, This would injurious epithets, menaces. have been the predominant passion of St. Francis of Sales, had he not controlled the but, thanks to vivacity of his temperament efforts and the assistance of the generous Blessed Virgin, whose devoted servant he was,
germs
all
;
.
.
.
;
he controlled this excessive quickness so well that he acquired exemplary alterable serenity of soul.
In another
meekness and un
it may be pride, which takes a thousand different forms. Sometimes he seeks to be elevated and distinguished above others; he aspires to honors and brilliant employments;
PREDOMINANT FA UL T.
207
again, if he find himself eclipsed he nourishes in his heart secret enmities and envy, which de
vour it if he be forgotten or others preferred him he grows angry the least praise in flates and delights him to a degree which ex cites ridicule as well as compassion. This was the passion of which St. Francis Xavier would have become the victim, if St. Ignatius had not taught him to turn it to a nobler object. Do cile to the teachings of his holy friend, he his ambition into zeal and became the changed the of Indies and glorious apostle Japan. In a third it may be a depth of indolence and sloth which keeps him plunged in a lethargy in which he is capable of nothing, in which he wastes and makes sterile the precious time of his life. Days, weeks pass without his advanc a step always planning, never executing ing always beginning, never achieving. How many other passions do we not see thus ;
to
;
;
It exercising their preponderating influence may be an inveterate love of talking a malice !
;
which is continually attacking the reputation of our neighbor a beginning of sordid avarice which denies a trifling alms to the poor a pue ;
;
vanity because of very ordinary advanta ges a propensity to lies a slothful ness which leads us into everything which flatters the body and the senses. They may all be reduced to rile
;
two
;
passions, the root of all the others
:
pride,
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
208
which refers everything to self, and sensuality, which seeks to gratify itself in everything, will be inconvenienced in nothing. Whatever the passion which predominates in us, we must know that it is our most mortal enemy, and if we would not become its prey we must fight it unto death. But how shall we know it? 2d. What is each one s predominant passion?
Here nize
are the marks by which
Our predominant
it.
we may
passion usual source of the sins into which
is
is
recog. the most
we
what produces trouble and remorse
souls sions
;
;
it
is
it
is
which we
fall;
it
our
in
the principal matter of our confes the fault we cherish most and for
be reproved or corrected finally, that over which we sigh in the depths of our heart, saying If I had not this unfortu nate propensity I would be a different man if I could get rid of it all my sins would disappear with it. If these indications are not sufficient ask your confessor he will tell you the predom like least to
;
:
;
;
inant fault which II.
fatal
you must combat. How must we combat it? As our most enemy, with energetic ardor. For, mark
tremble at the thought you are as to be eternally lost it will be your predominant passion which shall have caused your perdition. It is the breach in the
it
well, if
I
so unfortunate
citadel of will
your soul;
if
the citadel betaken
be through this breach that the devil
it
shall
PREDOMINANT FA UL T. enter
as also if
;
209
you close up this breach the and you are sure of victory
citadel will hold out
The predominant
and salvation. Goliath
fault is the
whom we must overcome;
if
you con
the Philistines will take flight; if you quer have not the courage to combat it that is, if it all
you allow yourself
to be governed by your pre dominant passion--all vices will enter your soul, your sins will be multiplied, your evil habits
be strengthened, you will fall into darkness sad consequences, of which the final result will frequently be impenitence will
and indifference
:
and perdition.
Then should we not combat such an enemy ? Should we not attack it resolutely, resolve its ruin that it may not be ours, and say with the / will piirsue after my enemies, and prophet :
overtake them
;
are consumed.
and I will not turn again until they I will break them, and they shall
not be able to stand ; they shall fall under
my feet ?
(Ps. xvii. 38, 39).
A
practical
means of gaining
this
triumph
is
particular examen, which consists in daily ex amining before God how we have struggled
against our predominant fault, how many times we have failed, how many times we have con
quered
;
after
which we ask pardon of
God and
we
resolve to struggle with new ardor until our This account daily exacted of next examen.
ourselves
stimulates vigilance and attention
;
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
210
we
are on our guard against the fault we force ourselves to avoid
to combat,
our efforts are
the
all
more
efficacious
we have
falls, and from being
concentrated upon one object alone. If, after the example of the King of Syria who ordered soldiers
his
to
direct
all
their darts against
Achab, King of Israel, you order the powers of your soul to direct all their forces against the king of your vices, you will triumph over it sooner or later, however powerful it appears. Let us begin this salutary struggle with good courage let us maintain it with perseverance, not forgetting to invoke with filial confidence the intercession of our Mother, the Blessed Vir ;
gin
;
and, like
rious.
all
the saints,
we
shall be victo
CHAPTER XXXIV. FORMATION OF CHARACTER. /
Qui operatur suam, inaltabit acervum fwtgum (He that tilleth his land shall make a high heap of corn). Eo terrain
CLUS. xx. 30.
HE
which each one must cultivate heart, his morals, his con duct towards God and towards men.
is
By we
field
own
his
this holy culture, by this persevering labor, correct the most shocking faults, we acquire
those beautiful virtues which form a fine char
acterthose win all.
virtues, replete with charms, that
for their possessor the respect
What
is
there
more
precious,
and love of
more
desira
than a fine character? It is one of man s best qualities it outranks science and hardly to virtue, with which, moreover, it is yields ble,
;
closely united. these words A :
The Holy Spirit man amiable in
more friendly than a brother (Prov.
signalizes it in society shall be xviii. 24).
This
man
so amiable, so attractive is one whose fine character wins all hearts. He is loved by God
and men, useful to society, happy himself, and making others happy. Rarely is a fine character a pure gift of na211
2
1
2
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
ture or grace usually it requires, like science, the concurrence of labor and practice but by means of a generous co-operation every man ;
;
can form for himself a fine character. Therefore we may say that formation of cha racter is an essential part in Christian educa tion, and for him who aspires to perfection an object which requires
all his
care.
That we may successfully undertake it let us try to comprehend all that relates to this in I. What we must pro teresting question :
perly understand by character; II. What is the origin of character and how we must form it. I. What must we understand by character?
A
person or rather tion,
s
character
is
his
manner of conduct,
a propensity, an habitual disposi impels him to conduct himself after
it is
which
a certain manner.
Each one has
as each one has his face.
moral physiognomy
;
it is
his character,
Character
no
is
man s among
a
less distinct
than the features of the face. And just as a face may be beautiful or repulsive, so a cha racter is susceptible of deformity or beauty it
men
;
good or bad character. A fine character manifests itself by a manner of conduct which is not only irreproachable,
is
the difference of
but also full of that sweetness and moderation which wins the affection of every one. It re sults from a collection of several virtues which
FORMA T, ON OF CHARA C TER.
2
1
3
sustain one another and make their influence more or less felt as circumstances call them forth. These virtues are integrity, honesty,
courage, moderation, and a great love for
man
kind.
which renders a man incapable of doing anything contrary to his honor or con science, must be the foundation of a fine cha Integrity,
racter.
Then honesty renders him incapable
of de
This honesty of which we never either indiscreet, offensive, or it is regulated by a delicate sentiment of and enhanced by the forms of good
ceiving any one.
speak rude; fitness
is
breeding.
To
honesty we must add courage and a noble independence which controls all vain timidity, which tramples under foot all that savors of the baseness of human respect. It is a noble senti
ment which raises man above all weaknesses and makes him incapable of blushing for any thing save a fault against honor or virtue. In action this noble courage becomes energy. It deliberates with prudence before every un but once the enterprise has been dertaking prudently conceived and wisely planned it pur ;
sues its execution with an indomitable strength and a perseverance which cannot fail of success. Moderation and calm. To energy a perfect character joins an imperturbable calm. In
SODA LI T Y DIRE C TOR S 1
2 14
vain
is
words it
ger,
MA N UAL.
resisted, outraged, attacked
it
so far from being carried
;
by
away by an
does not even appear moved, and
deration
is
bitter
a contrast to the violence of
its
mo
its
ene
To
passion it opposes only reason, and Hence that at need an unalterable patience. mies.
evenness
of
temper, that amiable gentleness to affability which wins all
wards everybody, that hearts.
is
Finally, that which completes a fine character love for his fellow-men. Nothing is nobler
than a heart animated by this love, this univer sal benevolence it loves all the world, even its ;
enemies it is compassionate of the afflictions of men and despises no one even the most revolt ;
;
ing vices excite in tion or contempt.
more grief than indigna Hence its respect and kind it
all, rich and poor, without exception hence that benevolence, that generosity which is carried to abnegation, to forgetfulness and sacrifice of itself hence that consideration, that complacency which refuses nothing, which lends itself to all the desires of others, ever yielding,
ness to
;
;
stopping only at the altar, as St. Francis of Sales says- -that is, when God and conscience inter
hence that friendly condescension which bends and accommodates itself to all, weeping
fere
;
with those
who weep,
rejoicing with those
who
rejoice.
Such
is
the beautiful collection of virtues
FORMA TIO.V OF CHAR. I C TER.
2
1
5
which constitute a fine character and give it so many charms. But we understand that in this collection of virtues there must be some which predominate, which determine the character and give it an individual tone. Thus there are calm and moderate characters, gentle and con ciliating characters, compassionate and generous characters, constant and energetic characters.
When
a character
is
distinguished by firmness
and by that noble independence which knows no fear when there is question of a duty to be performed, it is a character par excellence, and those who are endowed with it are called men of character.
Need we
that the noble character sav j
just been tracing
character?
The
is
we have
the counterpart of an evil
latter results
from a collec from some
tion of vicious qualities, or at least
vice predominating and corrupting the virtues
which may exist with it. Sometimes it is anger which one allows to govern him, or pride and ambition, or indolence and sloth, which degene rate into impurity
;
or, again, avarice, cupidity,
Hence we distinguish choleric and interest. and violent characters, vain and ambitious cha racters, effeminate* and sensual characters, ava ricious and interested characters, false and de ceitful characters; and we may say there are as
many vices.
evil characters as there are
predominating
2
SODALIT Y DIRECTOR S MANU-.L.
16
The foundation
of every evil character is sel Study one, see the principle through which he acts it is not conscience, nor duty,
fishness.
;
nor a true love for of himself, of his
his fellow-men,
own
interest, or
but love
any passion
which, without his knowledge perhaps, exer Not an imperious influence over him. that his conduct is alwavs evil, or that he is not at times capable of a good action, but these good cises
*
./
moments
are fleeting, like the
which they depend or the
good humor upon which is at
interest
stake.
The faults we have just indicated must be avoided with the greatest care the least of them mar the beauty of a fine character and weaken its charms. How II. Origin and formation of character. does a good character originate? Is it given us by nature ? Is it the work of grace, or must we acquire it by our own efforts ? Now, we may say that nature and grace powerfully concur in its formation, but in re ality it is we ourselves who must form it by our ;
personal co-operation.
To thoroughly
understand the necessity of on our part, observe that we natural character and acquired
this co-operation
distinguish character.
We one
s
natural character each understand bv j
natural
propensity,
which we
call
his
FORMA TION OF CHARA CTER.
2
1
7
*
good or bad nature. Every man is born with a germ of virtue and vice- -a germ which de velops into good or evil according as we cul or neglect its cultivation. Our charac ter, then, as nature gives it to us, is properly at the same time we neither good nor bad
tivate
it
;
say a nature
ground, easily
when
it
good when cultivated, and
is
resists cultivation.
it
is,
like
a nature
good is
bad
Never, however,
moral soil so bad that it may not be soft and ened improved by earnest labor joined to is
this
the assistance of divine grace. call an acquired character that which
We
each one forms to himself by co-operating or neglecting to co-operate with grace. To ac quire a truly good character we must be con-, vinced that labor is as indispensable for this end as the cultivation of the earth
ing of the harvest. on the contrary, it self,
to yield to
corrected will
To is
one
grow
is
for the obtain
possess a bad character
sufficient to neglect one s s propensities; faults not like
weeds
in
neglected ground. This indispensable labor is called forming the character- -a work which we must examine in a practical manner. How must the formation of a character be effected
?
Above
all it is necessary to will and effica resolve to apply one s self to the labor it ciously
SODALITY DIRECTOR
218
involves.
And why
should
MANUAL.
S
we
not have this
when we consider the grave fact that without this work of formation a good charac
resolution ter
is
not possible, and without a good charac is no success nor happiness in life?
ter there
A
man
of evil character, disagreeable humor, although he may have the most brilliant talents, the finest qualities, will excite contempt, anti
pathy, and opposition.
and
its
affairs;
you
Follow him through
will see that
life
he irritates
everybody, that he alienates the most favorably disposed minds, and consequently fails in all his A concili enterprises, spoils all he undertakes. and moderate on the man, contrary, a man ating of good character, is pleasing to God and to his fellow-men, useful to himself and to others; he wins the confidence of all, he calms passions, he dexterously manages minds and conducts What the most delicate affairs with success. is more precious than such a character? Ought
we not labor to acquire it by a good formation ? Now, formation of character consists in cor recting one s faults, of anger, of hardness and temper, of pride, of sensitiveness and indo
ill-
lence.
Four means concur
in
this correction
:
the reproofs of our parents and our superiorsreproofs which must be taken in good part and
with docility, even though they be accompa nied with salutary chastisement daily exami nation of conscience, especially particular ex;
FORMA TION OF CHA RA C TER.
2
1
9
amen, with which we combat our predominant fault; generosity in overcoming ourselves, tak ing for our motto, Vince te ipsum- -Conquer thy self; piety, by which we obtain assistance from on high, without which our efforts would re main sterile. By employing these means, whatever your faults, you will triumph over them sufficiently to form to yourself a truly good character, in which you will possess a sure pledge of the happiest and most honorable life.
CHAPTER XXXV. A SPIRIT OF ORDER AND LABOR. Me oportet
operati opera ejus, qui misit me, donee dies est (I of Him that sent me, whilst it is day).
must work the works
JOHN
ix. 4.
NE
of the most indispensable virtues, it most contributes to the so
because
lidity of all the others, is Christian in a spirit cf labor, to which is attached a dustry, of order and regularity. Let us give a spirit short explanation of one and the other.
A spirit of labor. Why must we love la and how must we love labor? ist. We must love labor for two reasons because God wills it and because labor has I.
bor,
precious
fruits.
Labor is a universal law Has subjects all His creatures.
Necessity of labor. to
which
He
God
not created
beings with wants and with Now, after having created them
all
imperfections? thus He was satisfied to furnish them means which would enable them to provide for their wants themselves and to acquire the perfection This providential disposition suitable to them. .20
A SPIRIT OF ORDER
AND
LABOR.
reveals the intentions of the Creator:
221
He
evi
dently wishes that His creatures should exer cise their faculties by employing the means He gives them to attain the end for which He has created them it is this exercise which consti ;
tutes labor.
Look
at the animals
Hence
and shelter.
;
they have need of food
their continual
movement,
their activity, their industry, their labor, either in search of food, or to defend themselves from their
enemies, or
young.
.
to
find
shelter
for
their
.
.
Even plants and continual action, as
all if
vegetable nature
is
in
subject to the law of la
bor to develop and produce fruit. And is not man obliged to obtain everything Yes, everything, absolutely through labor? .
everything, that
him:
food,
is
.
necessary and
habitation,
clothes,
and
.
useful
to
particu
knowledge and virtue, are at this price. Hence the well-known adage, Nihil sine la-
larly
bore- -Nothing without
labor.
This state of
the result
not only of the general things law of labor, but also of a positive decree uttered by divine Justice against guilty man. is
of our first parents God said The earth shall bring forth thorns and t Ins ties to thce. In the sweat of thy face shalt thou cat tf?y bread (Gen. iii. 18, 19). But you will say there are men born in opu-
After the to
Adam
:
sin
SODALITY DIRECTOR
222
MAA
S
T
UAL.
who possess an abundance of all things have they need to labor? They also are sub ject to the law of labor. First, is it not evident that the rich no less than the poor at their birth are without know ledge and virtue ? Therefore they must acquire them by labor and by serious and sustained efforts; without this mental and moral labor they will be, even with the most brilliant ex lence
;
but
terior,
the
name
chres.
As
.
.
to
ignorant, vicious men, meriting of gilded nothings, whited sepul
.
manual and corporal
true
;
slothful idleness
and
is
many it is not an obligation but does mean that they can abandon themselves to
that for
that
it
labor,
all
are
?
Idleness
condemned
is
a vice in any one
;
to labor, either corporal
or mental. Thus the rich, like all men on earth, have a task to fulfil they must employ their leisure and their faculties for the common good by taking part in the public administration, or in :
any other way
as circumstances require.
Woe
to those rich sluggards who do nothing but en joy their fortune, or who even abuse the tem
poral gifts they have received from God, using to offend their Supreme Benefactor and
them
to injure their fellow-beings!
Then for
all.
labor
is
necessary and of obligation
AND
A SPIRIT OF ORDER Fruits of labor.
labor
is
a treasure
It ;
223
said with truth that
is
it
LABOR.
is,
source of
in fact, a
blessings to soul and body. It preserves us from all the evils of idleness
and
inactivity.
Idleness
is
not on I} the mother 7
of ignorance, but also of misery and nearly all It is called with reason stagnant water,
vices.
uncultivated land, the devil
s
pillow.
.
.
Now,
.
by keeping us from idleness, us from the fatal effects of this vice preserves it is for this reason that the saints recommend a spirit of labor,
;
a spirit of labor as a safeguard of virtue Let t/ie devil find you always occupied, says St. Je :
rome. It frees
never
The
us from melancholy and ennui, which to
fail
accompany
inactivity.
natural fruit of labor
studies or
other things.
all
is
.
.
.
success either in
What
does not the
laborious cultivation of the earth effect, even when the ground is unfertile? What fine re sults are
produced, what services rendered by
men who by
their labor
make good use
of the
talent, even mediocre talent, which they have received from Providence! This saying of one
of the ancients is true in
every sense
(
f
the
word Labor omniavincit improbus(V\rg., Georg. :
I.
145)-
A the
-Everything yields to persevering labor.
spirit of labor, finally,
moments
makes us utilize all and lay up
of a precious time
treasures of merit for heaven.
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
224
Manner of laboring-. How must we labor ? With an upright and Christian intention, for God, and to accomplish our duty. We cannot, then, consider whether the labor which comes to us is agreeable, but whether it is and constitutes a duty. The subject or matter of labor
We we
God s
will
may vary. distinguish three kinds of subjects, which call the labor of duty or obligation, useful
The last consists of labor, pleasurable labor. innocent amusement, pastime, any honest oc cupation suitable to relax the mind. In regard to amusing occupations, we must beware of indulging in them at the expense of our duties; we must make but a moderate use of them, in order not to lose in them a precious time of which we will each have to render an account to God. To avoid this shoal we have but one rule to follow- -a rule as simple as it is
just:
The necessary before
useful, Ike useful
tlie
before the agreeable.
We
must labor pntiently and
faithfully in
union with the labor of Jesus Christ, the Bless ed Virgin, and St. Joseph. Let us add we must have order in our labor. II. Order. To succeed in labor, to labor with facility, and even with the greatest possi What ble speed, we must proceed with order. is order? And how must we apply it to labor? Order in general consists of a just and suit.
.
.
A SPIRIT OF ORDER
AND
LABOR.
225
able disposition of things, as may be seen in the works of nature, in the human body, in a library, in a lexicon, in a musical instrument. .
.
.
example of order on the contrary, is
Marry things afford a striking
and harmony.
Disorder,
we
confusion, tumult, destruction, as sical
see in
phy
and moral disturbances, such as tempests,
inundations, revolutions, wars.
.
.
.
Order, being based on truth, becomes in its turn a principle of the good and the beau tiful.
.
.
.
Order comes from God and it leads to God. God, being supreme truth, imprints upon all His works His divine seal- -the order and beauty which meet our eyes everywhere He disposes all t /lings in measure, and number, and weight (Wis. :
xi.
To convince
21).
ourselves of this
we need
only consider the heavens, their structure, their or the Church found admirable movements ed by Christ, her hierarchy, and her march ;
through ages;
all
.
.
.
therein
is
order, regularity,
subordination, like an
army ranged for battle. Order comes from God, and whoever loves or
der draws near to life, says St.
God
:
If there
be order in
your
Augustine, order will lead you to
God.
Order
is
the principle of beauty, of strength, What is more beautiful than a
of prosperity.
well-constructed
concert
?
And
is
edifice, than a harmonious not order the principle of this
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
226
beauty ? What is stronger than an army ? But not order also the principle of its strength?
is .
.
.
Look
at a
prosperous country where com
merce, agriculture, the arts flourish; whence is prosperity, if not from the order produced there by the wisdom of its laws and its govern
its
ment?
Would you succeed
in your particular and in different labors? Work enterprises your with order and method then you will omit no thing of what you have to do you will accom ;
;
plish
much more you ;
will be
happier
;
you
will
practise naturally, as it were, the precious virtue of Christian mortification. ... If, on the con trary, you are lacking in order you will easily fall into a habit of acting through caprice,
through humor, and even through passion you you will neglect many things hence losses, failures, and then regrets, vexations, and a thousand anxieties. How must we apply order to labor and to a life of labor ? We must do so by means of a rule or order of life. We understand by this a plan, a sort of list, in which we mark the prin cipal duties we have to perform and determine ;
will forget,
;
.
.
.
a time for them, according to the particular po sition in which we are placed. In this plan must
be prominently marked an hour for rising and retiring, evening and morning prayer, spiritual reading, and the regular reception of the sacra ments. Then the different exterior duties, la-
A SPIRIT OF ORDER
AXD
LABOR.
227
bors, works of charity, even amusements, should have their place assigned them. As to each one s special work, in order to carry it on with order and success we must ap ply ourselves to it with our whole heart, study it, if necessary, in order to thoroughly under stand it, and then pursue it perseveringly. It is
rare that persevering labor
is
not crowned
with success.
Such
is
the spirit of order and labor, so valu
able both to civil and Christian
life. Let us de ourselves to it vote acquiring by generous ef forts; and let us ask the Blessed Virgin to help
us by her powerful intercession.
CHAPTER XXXVI. CAREER AND VOCATION. Vias tuas, Domine, demonstra mihi,
(Show,
O
Ps. xxiv.
et
semitas tuas edoce
Lord, thy ways to me, and teach
me
me
thy paths).
4.
HE
term of human education, the crown ing finish of youth, is entering upon a career, the career wfiich
it is
to follow
during life. This career may be happy and no ble; but it may also, and in fact too frequently is, filled with dishonor and bitter sorrows. This very grave difference depends particu larly on what is called one s choice of a state in
you make a good choice you assure yourself a happy and honorable career; if you make a bad choice you enter upon a way of mis life.
If
ery and dishonor.
Now,, to make a good choice it is absolutely necessary to embrace the state to which God calls us; in other words, we must follow our vocation. To thoroughly understand this, and that we may be wisely directed in so grave a matter, let us examine, first, the true idea of 228
CA REER A ND VO CA TION.
229
second, the manner of faithfully fol s vocation. understand I. True idea of vocation. state of the vocation life, the proper career, by
vocation
;
lowing one
We
place destined by Providence for every man here It is named vocation- -t\\at is, calling, be below.
God
cause
calls
each man, as
if
by
his
name, to
Governing assign him a place in this world. the universe with infinite and wholly paternal wisdom,
God
sees the different states, the differ
ent degrees, the diverse places in human socie ty, and He creates to fill them men to whom
He
gives qualities and graces fitted to that end so that each one, in the designs of Providence, ;
destined for a state which constitutes his vo God acts like a father of a family,
is
cation.*
who
assigns to each of his servants and each of the labor, the employment which
his children
he knows
proportioned to their strength or He acts like a skilful gardener, who ability places each plant, each tree in the earth which he knows is suited to it like a builder, who shapes each stone according to its destination like a watchmaker, who adjusts each wheel to is
;
;
;
the place in which it is to work. In like manner acts Providence.
each one for a *
We
state, a vocation ;
He
destines
so that voca-
speak here of universal Providence, without reference to the par whether God leaves certain persons the choice between sev
ticular question
eral states
wherein they
may
serve
Him
with equal perfection.
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
230
tion depends properly, not on ourselves nor on the arbitrary choice of our parents, but upon the counsels of God.
The -that
which one may be called are nu in a moral and religious sense view of the organized Christian so
states to
merous. is,
Taken in
ciety- -there
common
are three:
the secular state, or
the ecclesiastical state, and the re The first is founded on the ob ligious state. servance of the commandments, the second on life,
the divine prerogatives of the priesthood and clerical obligations, the third on the observance of the evangelical counsels. These states are but three varieties of the
Christian
three
ways of
living Christianly, three ways by which we may and should attain salvation by following in the footsteps of Je Thus we may call these states, the sus Christ. first,
life,
the world the second, the priesthood the third, in the cloister. You will say,
the Christian
the Christian
life
the Christian
life
life in
;
in
;
perhaps, that these states are
much more nu
merous, that magistrates, doctors, lawyers, sol diers, artisans, merchants form so many differ ent states.
No
these are only professions, occupations, or distinct social positions, and not states properly speaking. only give that name to the states which form part of the social ;
We
organization
which impose
established
by our Saviour, and
essentially different obligations.
CAREER AND VOCATION.
231
These three states, having been equally es tablished by God, are all three good in them selves, all three necessary, but not all three equal in dignity. Thus the different members, organs of the human body- -the hands, the feet, the eyes--are equally noble, equally necessary to man so the different ma terials- -wood, marble, metals- -which God has created for the wants of man are necessary, though some are more valuable than others. diverse
the
;
At the same time, if these states constitute different degrees, it does not follow that indi viduals occupying the highest will have more merit before
God, because on
merit shall perfection with
their
the
depend particularly which each shall fulfil the duties of his state. Thus on the stage the merit of the actors de less upon the role they play than upon manner in which each one performs his
pends the role.
may
Again, also, a subject sculptured have more merit than one done
in in
. ble, ivory, or gold. If we consider the states relatively- -that .
they relate to best for each is
called,
for
.
man, who must one
is
wood mar is,
as
them- -the that to which he evidently fulfil
the reason that
it
is
the
state
which is suited to him, which is made for him, for which he himself is made, and for which God has given him proportionate talents and graces.
The
holiest state, then,
is
not the best
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
232
any more than the most valuable mate all workmen. For example, for one who works in wood the best material, that with which he will work best, is wood for the for
all,
best for
rial is
;
sculptor, marble, as gold for the goldsmith. What we have just said makes it already evi
dent that each one must embrace the state to which God calls him in other words, that each ;
one must follow his vocation. But here is a principle of conduct so important that it be hooves us to separately consider the motives for it, that we may thoroughly understand its importance. Motives for following one
s
The
vocation.
man who
follows his vocation, who is in his vo in his place there only is he happy, is cation, there only is he successful, there only does he ;
work out
his salvation.
There only he
is
Why?
is he happy. Yes, in his vocation happy, he is contented, he is at ease. Because he is in his place. Thus the
members place
;
of a
body are
so also the
little
fishes in the sea,
at ease,
birds are
each
happy
in
its
in the
in the field,
be cause they are in their place, their element. Man finds himself similarly happy, however humble
wood,
sheep
condition, provided he is in the position God destined for him, provided he is following
his
his vocation.
Outside
his vocation,
however high the
posi-
CAREER AND VOCATION.
233
out of place, and for that rea The man who has missed his vocation is like a member out of He is a joint, like a being out of its element. tion
son
may
ill
he,
he
at ease
is
and unhappy.
traveller pursuing a false route, painfully toiling in a path outside the beaten road to his country.
Let us consider, for example, the state of holy orders.
It is
the holiest and happiest of states
;
without vocation and you will be because you are not called to it and unhappy, because you should have remained in the world. but enter
it
the contrary, if God call you to the priest hood or the cloister, and you remain in the
On
world to there enjoy more happiness, know that instead of happiness you will find only grief and trouble you will be restless and unhappy, be ;
cause your place was the sanctuary. See, on the other hand, those poor religious in their cells, those priests in their parishes, those fathers of families in their
homes and
their business-
they are happy and contented. Why ? Because they are in their place, they are in their voca tion. It is here, then, in our vocation, that we are happy. It is there also that one meets with success.
Who
does not like to succeed in his career? It very hard to see all that we attempt turn out badly, to fail in all that we undertake, as if a curse were upon us. What is frequently the cause ? It is that we are not called to the labor is
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
234
we undertake. God has not made us for it He has not given us the requisite qualities for it, nor does He bless us in it. These are the causes of failure and sterility. On the contrary, ;
when we
are in our place,
when we
are
em
which we were made, ployed we have all that is needed to succeed- -talent, Then we labor with taste, the blessing of God. with with success and fruit. happiness, facility,
work
in the
Man
vocation
in his
which
suits
Then
fruits.
we
it;
it is
for
is
see
like a tree planted in soil it
in his
covered with abundant vocation that
man
finds
success. Finally, tion. it is
it
We
there that he attains his salva
is
do not say that outside
his vocation
impossible to save his soul, but
if
he
may
with a great deal more trouble and much less merit. * The reason is that he finds himself in a state for which he has received nei ther talents nor graces, consequently he finds
save
it it is
himself face to face with obligations, obstacles,
and dangers disproportioned to
his
means and
On
the contrary, the man who is his strength. in his vocation finds himself equal to his duties,
because God has proportioned his strength to them. If he encounter enemies he is armed to conquer them if he encounter obstacles he is ;
*
There are cases where
it
is
unless he embrace a certain state. state,
it
morally impossible fora man to save his soul Such a man is strictly obliged to enter this
being his only means of salvation.
CAREER AND VOCATION.
235
strong to conquer them if he encounter evil he knows how to turn it to good. He profits by everything, he sanctifies everything, and his ;
career becomes like the
way
of the just, wkic/i
as a shining light goeth forward even to perfect day (Prov. iv. 18).
and
increaseth
Manner
of following one s vocation. Three are things necessary to follow one s vocation well- -we must make ourselves worthy of it, we
must know respond to
it,
we
must,
finally, efficaciously
cor
it.
We
must render ourselves worthy of it by re maining faithful to God and by cultivating all the qualities of mind and heart which we have received from
Him;
vating knowledge and
who
in
other words, by culti
virtue.
lose their vocation
There are some
their slothfulness or
by by the vices to which they abandon themselves. For example, a young man is one day destined
something great he has corrupted his mind his heart, and rendered himself incapable of fulfilling the place for which God destined him he has lost his vocation. Instead of dissi pating this treasure he should have carefully preserved it and by his life made himself wor
for
;
and
thy of
To know
God
designs for him. be able to follow our vocation we must Since it is God who gives vocations, it. s
is He also who knows them and who must make each one s known to him. If He spoke
it
SODALITY DIRECT: R S MANUAL.
236
exteriorly to His creatures to designate to each one his place it would be a very simple matter, He but usually God does not act in this way.
when the creature appeals to Him but speaks, by certain signs which man must examine with attention and prudence. Now, to practically fulfil these conditions three things speaks, but
;
He
are required on our part: prayer, purity of in must daily pray and tention, and counsel. ask of God the grace to know our vocation.
We
Purity of heart is necessary, in order that the light of the Holy Spirit may penetrate our hearts and make us see the path which we
Counsel
should follow.
is
indispensable in so
grave a matter; we must ask it of a wise direc This is tor and follow his advice with docility. the
way
in
which we
will obtain a
knowledge
of our vocation.
We is,
must correspond to it efficaciously- -that promptly, with courage and perseverance.
Promptly.
When
the will of
ciently known we must make cision is as fatal as precipitation.
God
is
suffi
a decision; inde
Once
the de
is made we must think of executing it, which we should do with prudence, but with
cision
out any unnecessary delay. calls us;
we must go
With courage.
It
It
is
God who
Him
without delay. rarely happens that there to
not obstacles, particularly question of leaving the world
are
;
when there is we must over-
CAREER AND VOCATION.
237
come
these obstacles with the courage of which Aloysius has given such a beautiful example to all youth. It is then we must say with the St.
/ must obey God rather than men. With perseverance. We must never pause
apostles until
we
:
are freed from
ties and find our But the correspon dence which the grace of our vocation demands must not stop here. When man is fixed in the state to which God calls him it remains for him to fulfil the designs of God by all
selves in the desired state.
faithfully
performing all the duties which this state im This is what is called honoring and poses. sanctifying one s state, completely fulfilling one s vocation. By so doing we reach hea ven by an easy and happy road, we assure our selves a holy death and a glorious eternity. Ask, dear Children of Mary, through the in tercession of the Blessed Virgin, your Mother, the double grace to know your vocation and to faithfully correspond with it until death.
CHAPTER XXXVII. TRUE HAPPINESS. Beatus vir qui timet eth the Lord).
HOUGH ness,
who that
any
Dominum
(Blessed
is
the
man who
fear-
Ps. cxi.
we
all
men
desire and seek happi
see, nevertheless, that
very few
are happy; and even the small number appear so, experience so much trouble
we may ask
with reason whether there be
real happiness
on earth.
happiness on earth- -true happiness. say true happiness, and not perfect happiness exempt from all trouble freedom from trouble and misery is only to be found in paradise, where all tears shall be dried. Well, yes, there
is
We
;
At the same time of
in this valley of tears the heart a content which satis
man may experience
lawful desires, and which gives him, not perfect happiness, at least real happiness. Such was that which the holy Simeon expe
fies all his if
rienced when, holding the infant Messias in his arms, he cried out that his desires were fulfilled, that nothing more remained for him to desire It is of this happiness which David on earth. 238
TRUE HAPPINESS. speaks sir etk
239
when he says Who is the man that dewho loveth to see good days f (Ps. : :
life
And are not they happy who say with the apostle: We live having nothing, and possessing all things ? Then there are contented hearts, there is true xxxiii. 13).
But what happiness on earth. ness? Where is it to be found ? blessings
it
procures
?
They
is
this
What
happi are the
are not exterior
blessings, riches, pleasures, worldly honors, but interior blessings hidden in the service of God.
Happiness does not consist in exterior blessings, for they cannot give that content ment to the heart which alone makes us truly 1.
happy.
Then they do not
consist in riches.
The ma
jority persuade themselves that had they the fortune they desire nothing would be wanting to their happiness but they feed themselves with a vain illusion. Had you the fortune you desire, know that it would no longer suffice you you would want still more. And even were you to limit your desires and content yourself with the fortune acquired, would you not have to preserve it, to administer it, to make use of ;
;
it?
Now,
in all this
you would
find anxieties
and cares which would harass you like so many thorns and destroy your happiness. Let us go in it her: even though you were to find in it what your heart desired, how long would this
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
.240
happiness last?
Must you not
die Soon and
these possessions? Ah! the rich die as well as the poor, and bitter is their death. leave
O
all
death
!
says the
remembrance of thee
Holy
Spirit,
how
bitter is the
a man that hath peace in
to
If the remem (Ecclus. xli. i). so bitter what shall the reality be ? who is attached to his riches sepa
his possessions
brance
is
The man
rates himself trom
of the wicked rich
man
died also^
xvi. 22). If happiness is it
men
and
God and
follows the path
man
of the Gospel: The iich he was buried in hell (Luke
does not consist
in riches neither
Look at those to be found in pleasures. who gather all the flowers of life, who re
fuse nothing to their eyes, to their taste, to the appetites of their senses; who run from feast
to feast, from amusement to amusement. They are thought happy, and they are called the for tunate ones of the world are they in reality? Ah so little are they that, sighing under the ;
!
weight of their ennui, they find life frequent Deceived by the illusions of ly a burden. the senses and passion, they believe they are seeking supreme happiness; but when they have attained the phantom of their pursuit the illusion vanishes, their intoxication disappears,
and there only remain to them emptiness, de They vainly run in pur ception, and remorse. suit
of other objects
;
they find only
new
de-
TRUE HAPPINESS. It
captions.
is
241
true that, soon disgusted and
wearied, they desire to leave this abominable way, but passion retains them- -passion which tyrannizes over them, which, like a devouring fire, continually demands ne\v food and is
never
satisfied.
Ah! yes;
at the bottom of this cup of plea sures are bitter dregs and a fatal poison, which, destroying peace of heart and true joy, leave
man him
in
an overwhelming void, or even cast
into despair.
What
the fate of the vpluptunries of the world but that of the prodigal of the Gospel? is
This misguided young man, wishing to be sa tiated with the torrent of all sensual pleasures, left his father s house and went into a distant
country, where he gave himself up to the most shameful life. But having soon squandered all his means, he was reduced to taking service with a master who charged him with the keep ing of a herd of swine. This was not all dy ing of hunger in this hard service, he would fain have shared the husks of the swine, but even these were de lied him. :
.
What
.
.
misery, what degradation
!
One
of
the ancients vividly represents this degrading state by the fiction of Circe and the enchanted
This cup, he said, contained a fatal poi cup. son which produced strange effects. Those
who drank
of
it
soon changed form
:
their
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
242
mouths lengthened
like the
muzzle of an ani
mal, they walked on all-fours like quadrupeds,
and eat only herbs and grass. Thus pleasures, instead of making men happy, only brutalize them. Is not happiness to be found in honors and
human grandeurs?
Ah! when was
the thirst
Ambition, like ava never says, Enough. Be sides, a man racked by this passion knows no rest one time he is threatened by rivalries, another time consumed by jealousies or con founded by humiliations. For whoever exalteth himself shall be humbled- -frequently during this life, for ever humbled by death, which breaks all human grandeur as if it .were a fra Therefore glory and honors no gile vase. more than pleasures and riches can make the of ambition ever satiated
?
like sensuality,
rice,
;
happiness of the
human
Hear the testimony ed
who had enjoy world can give. He attests that in he found but emptiness and vanity: Van
all this
it all
ity
heart.
of a king
of vanities says Solomon--zw///j/ of
and
,
all
is
vanity.
vanities,
1 ivas king over Israel in
y<
r li
I have be com great, and have gone be ail in wisdom that were before me in Jeru yond salem ; 1 /teaped tog thcr for myself silver and gol-1, and the wealth of kings and provinces ; and iv/iatsoi ver my eyes desired I refused them not, and I ivith eld not my hea t jrom enjoying very sa le in
;
>
<
TRUE HAPPINESS.
243
and I saw in all tilings vanity and vexa of mind (Eccles. i. 2, 12, 16; ii. 8, 9, 10, n).
pleasure, tion
All, then, is vanity for man here below, except Ftar God, says the wise the service of God.
man, and keep
his
commandments, for
man (Eccles. xii. 13). Then man s happiness found
in this life is
this is all
not to be
in exterior blessings.
That which constitutes our happiness. is the blessing s of the heart which we find in God and His service. O Israel, says the Lord by the mouth of the prophet, O that tlion Jiadst hearkened to my commandments ; thy peace had been as a river, and thy justice as the waves of the sea (Isaias xlviii. 18). Thus the Holy Spirit Blessed is the man that unceasingly tells us :
Lord ; he shall delight His commandments (Ps. cxi. l). fearetli the
exceedingly in
What are the blessings of the heart constitute the happiness of the just? ist. The peace of a good conscience.
which
When
conscience makes no reproach, when the Holy Spirit within us gives us the sweet testimony that we arc the children of God, we experience a contentment the delight of which all the riches of the \vorld could rot give. Thus it has been
that contentment was better than and Scripture declares that a tranquil
said
truly riches, lieart
joy
it
is
a ferpetital feast.
may
raise
The
just
who
en
their eyes with confidence to
SOD LITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
244
heaven
;
they behold there a Father
who
loves
them and protects them, and not a judge who threatens them. They may look forward to the future, for it contains the sweet hope of heaven and not the abyss of despair. When they retire to rest they can sleep tranquilly with out the fear of dying and awakening in hell and in their journeys the thought of accidents need not move them, for they are always ready to appear before God. Yes, as the author of the Imitation says, if there be happiness on earth it is the portion of the pure heart. Such is the first principle of true happiness a ;
good conscience.
The second
principle of happiness is be Blessed are tJie vicnijul, says the Saviour- -that is, those who practise charity and 2d.
nevolence.
benevolence towards their neighbor bl ssed are mcrcyirom God. The mercy which God promises them is not only their salvation in the next life, but also a reward in this present life. Benevolence is at once rewarded by an interior satisfaction, the sweetness of which is known only to charitable souls, and which surpasses all the pleasures of avarice and sensual egotism. Ah what hnpthe merciful, for they shall obtain
!
piness they are deprived of who, having the means of exercising benevolence, think not of
doing so 3d.
...
A third principle of happiness
is
humility.
TRUE HAPPINESS.
245
Just as pride and ambition trouble souls, so hu mility procures them calm and repose. Learn of me, savs the Saviour, because I am meek and /turnf
*/
ble
of keart
(Matt.
xi.
:
29)
and you ;
shall find rest to
your
soius
and the author of the Imitation
develops this promise in these beautiful words 1 he humble man God protects and d livers ; the humble He loves and comforts ; to the humble He inclines Himself ; to the Jmmblc He gives grace, and after lie has been depressed raises him to glory. To the humble He rt veals His secrets, and sweetly draivs and invites him to Himself. The humble :
man, Jiaving received no reproach, maintains Jiiniself iv ell enougli in peace, because he is fixed up en God and not on the world (book ii. chapter ii.)
A
fourth principle of happiness is ac complished dutv. He who puts his pleasure or interest before duty will not be happy, for 4th.
he he
will fall
into
all
kinds of
faults,
with which
be reproached by God, by men, and by his own conscience. Nothing, on the contrary, \vill
sweeter and at the same time more honor lips of men, or at last from God You have done your duty. Now, whoever takes this noble stand and sees in the world only his duty, to which all other things are subordinate whoever knows no other prin ciple but that of fulfilling his duty, and tmdeviis
able than to hear from the :
;
atingly follows this rule of conduct, as simple as it is enlightened, will hear from men, or at
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
246
least in the depth of his heart from God Yon have done your duty, and it is ivell, according to :
word of God
the that
in Isaias:
well (Isaias
it is
A
iii.
Say
to the
just
man
10).
principle of happiness is suffering borne for Jesus Christ. To say that suffering thus gives happiness seems contrary to truth 5th.
fifth
;
we
men
from suffering as an evil, and call those unhappy who suffer. Neverthe less, it is a truth which the Eternal Wisdom proclaims and which experience confirms: man is happy when he accepts suffering for love of see that
fly
Jesus Christ. Blessed are they that suffer per secution for justice* sake, says the Saviour blessed ;
are ye when
and speak sake
be
;
tliey sliail revile
all tJiat
is
glad and
you,
and persectite you,
evil again
t you untruly for my for your reivard is vtry
rejoice,
By the word persecution we must understand all the trials, labors, and tribu lations which we encounter in the path of vir tue. Borne for Jesus Christ and in union with
great in heaven.
His sufferings, marvellous joy
trials :
all our tribulation (2
of this
joy
;
ness.
life
their
fill
Christian souls with
/ exceedingly abound wit It joy
become
Cor.
Thus the
in
evils
for the just a principle of
bitterness
Then what
vii. 4).
is
changed into sweet them? Have
evil can reach
the} not found a paradise upon earth ? Yes, says the author of the Imitation, ivlien tJwu sJialt ar 7
rive thus
far that
tribulation becomes sweet
and
TRUE HAPPINESS.
247
savory to t /ice for the I ve of Clu-ist, tJien think it is well with thee,for tliou {tost found a paradise upon earth (book ii. 12). Behold the blessings contained in the service
and which constitute true happiness here below- -happiness all the more precious that nothing can rob us of it, and that it is the prelude of perfect happiness, of the beatitude of .God,
which awaits us
in the next life. we, truly penetrated with this truth, seek May we shall happiness only at the real source thus escape a thousand delusions and all the bitter disappointments of vanity, and we shall see the words of the Holy Spirit verified in us Blessed is t/ie man w/io fears the Lord. ;
:
CHAPTER
XXXVIII.
FAITH. Justus ex fide vivit (The just i.
man
liveth
by
faith).
ROM
17.
HE just
man, who
is
no other than the
true Christian, is presented to us as the tree of benediction planted by the
hand of the Lord
The ju&t shall flourish like the the house of the Lord, says the he shall groiv up like tiie cedars of Li:
palm-tree plantt d in
Psalmist
banns
;
;
planted in the
Jinise
tlie
of
Lord, he shall
flourish in the. courts of t lie house of Now, just as every tree lives 14).
God
(xci. 13,
by the root, so the just man lives by faith, which is his vital The holy Council of Trent express principle. it in these words Faith is the be declares ly :
foundation and ginning of root of all justification (sess. 6, chap, viii.) This consideration sufficiently shows us the necessity, the excellence of faith, and its influ t lie s
Ivation of men,
tJie
ence upon all Christian life. For the sounder and stronger the root the more vigorous and fruitful the tree.
We but
is
have the happiness of possessing ftiith our faith perfect ? Does it leave nothing ;
FAITH.
249
Do we
not merit the reproach our Saviour so frequently addressed the apos to be desired
tles
O ye
:
?
of little faith ?
To renew and more and more is
and what Faith.
its
We
strengthen this salutary virtue us let us consider what faith qualities should be. know that the virtue of faith is in
God and
by which we firmly believe, because of God s supreme truth, all that has been divinely revealed and held as re velation by the Church. Faith is, then, an interior light which God has giv^n us to learn what we absolutely need to know- -our true position upon earth. Placed in this world for a time only, should not man be eager to know what he is to do here, whence he came, whither he is going, what destiny God holds for him after death, and how he must prepare himself for this des These great questions our reason is tiny? powerless to solve we need the light of faith, the teaching of God. For observe that the light of faith comes from God faith is believing what God has said and a gift of
a light
;
;
taught. God deigned to instruct men Himself; He instructed us by word of mouth, as a father
does his children, and His divine words have been preserved- -not one fell to the ground; they have been transmitted to us by the Scrip tures and the Tradition of the
Church divinely
SODALITY DIRECTOR
250
S
MANUAL.
instituted to be the infallible guardian of
God
s
word. Yes. God has spoken to the human race. And have men listened to His word? The di vine word, which is also called the Gospel, an nounced to all peoples of the earth, has been received by some and despised by others. the number of those who received the ancient Gauls, to whom holy mis sionaries like Martin, Armand, Lieven came
Among
it
are
to preach
the faith in the sixth and seventh
century.
Our
fathers believed with
all
their
hearts, and they have left us with the doctrine of salVation the most beautiful monuments of their faith in these monasteries founded throughout all countries, and in those ancient churches the magnificence of which attests the
piety of their founders. Yes, we frequent the temples where our fa thers prayed, but do we really pray there, do
we frequently approach the sacraments, do we hear the word of God with the same faith ? Alas the faith of the majority is so weak in !
our day.
Those who
to listen to the divine
come sometimes word, when they hear still
sermons upon sin, judgment, the Passion of Jesus Christ, the eternal happiness of the just, the perdition of the wicked, the endlessness of eternity, they regard these subjects, if not as problems, at least as events so remote that
FAITH.
251
i
they make
or no impression upon their
little
soul. Is this, then,
fathers it
Is
?
it
the lively and active faith of our even a solid and serious faith ? Is
the faith of a true Christian?
should our
faith
Qualities of faith.
God
wishes
Our
must be
it,
What,
then,
be? be such as firm, lively, and effica faith, to
cious.
Our
must be firm that is, immovable, shadow of doubt and giving us
faith
excluding
all
same certainty that we have of those evi dent truths which are the first lights of our rea son. Whence is this absolute certainty of our faith? It results from the foundation upon which our faith rests, which is no other than the
Supreme Truth, God, who speaks
to us
and who
can neither deceive nor be deceived. Not so with men: they can be deceived, and
we must accept their testimony only when we are very sure they speak the truth. But God, the essence of cannot be truth, deceived, being cannot err;
His testimony
Then ought we not certainty
What! we of
it
ever infallible. with absolute
?
worthy of
mony
believe
is
God
what is related by men and we will doubt the testi
believe
credit, ?
Were
a missionary of
known
integrity to return from Palestine, where he visited Jerusalem and all the holy places, and
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
252
say to you I saw with my own eyes the city which Jesus traversed bearing His cross, the Calvary where He died for our salvation, the sepulchre whence He rose on the third day, would you not believe him? You would be :
lieve him, because he spoke of what he saw and he was a man worthy of credit. And Jesus
Son of God- -has He not seen ? Have we not His word in the Gospel, do we not receive it from the Church as if from His own lips ? He tells us of
Christ, the true
what He
tells
heaven, of
us
hell,
of
all
the mysteries of religion,
and there are men who refuse to believe because they themselves have not seen. Ah soon they like the devils will see and believe, but, alas !
!
W LO J
believe
Lord, we
and tremble (James
believe
Thy
ii.
divine word,
19).
we
Ah
!
believe
without having seen we believe, but increase our faith, give us a lively, firm faith. A lively faith should Vivacity of our faith. We call not be confounded with a living faith. that a living faith which is accompanied with ;
.
sanctifying grace, which is the life of the soul while a lively faith is a clear, enlightened, lu minous faith which manifests what it teaches us ;
if we beheld it with our eyes or with onr ears. It resembles a cle ir
as clearly as
heard
it
night in which all the stars are resplendently visible in the sky, or the view of a city which a traveller visits and contemplates near by.
FAITH.
253
When travelling you perceive from a high mountain a great city on the border of the hor izon, almost lost in the distance, and then, con tinuing your route, you see enter it and visit its edifices.
how much
it
near by
How
;
you
different,
clearer is your view of it Thus a weak, obscure faith sees the mysteries revealed by God in the remote distance; a lively faith, on the contrary, beholds them clearly, unmar-
red
!
by shadow or
Animated by
mist.
this
faith, the faithful feel as if they had lived with Christ and the apostles. Such was the faith
of the saints; such
fervent Christians
and works.
;
is it
In fact,
day the
to
still
shows
faith of
forth in their
words
the character of faith
it is
to reveal itself in holy works, as light in rays in other words, a lively faith is also an effica
;
cious faith.
Faith Efficacy of faith. has results and it
when
is
efficacious, active,
fruitful in good Without works faith is dead, St. James tells us, and avails nothing for eternal life; it shall even cause us to be judged more severely. To know the truths of salvation and not con is
works.
form our
render ourselves The word of God is a seed
thereto
life
gravely guilty.
which must produce true Christian
bad Christian thorns.
is
is
fruit.
to
Thus the
life
of a
while that of a a land covered with briers and
is
like a
field,
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
254
It was faith which produced the works we admire in the saints. Ah let us not be satis !
let us imitate with a sterile admiration them. Would to God faith were lively and Then we should see efficacious in all hearts men occupy themselves with eternal things,
fied
;
!
we should
flourish and virtues with them peace and and reign everywhere,
see
good works
happiness.
O for
holy Virgin, who wast singularly blessed, thou hadst perfect imi\\--beata quce credi-
z-
-obtain for us a faith like thine, help us which our faith could
to avoid the dangers in
be wrecked.
CHAPTER XXXIX. HOPE. Ut fortissimum solatium habcamus, qui confugiimis ad tcnendam propositam spent qtiam sicut ancoram habeuius anitnce tutam ac firmam (We have the strongest comfort, who have fled for refuge to hold fast the hope set before us which we have as an anchor of the soul, sure and
firm).
HEB.
vi.
18.
jjOPE, the second of the theological vir tues, springs from faith like the stem from the root. At sight of God as represents Him to us, a Father full of goodness, the heart naturally awakens to a sweet hope. As faith is the principle of our spiritual life, so hope is the principle of our consolation and faith
our strength. The divine Master wishes that we should follow Him by means of many crosses and trials; but He promises us great blessings, the hope of which affords us great consolationfortissimum solatium ; consolations so powerful that they not only soften the hardest trials but give us joy in the midst of tears: Spe ga-ndentes.
We
have, further, labors to endure, storms to
encounter; then hope is our strength; it up holds us like a column, that the edifice of our
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
256 faith
may
not crumble
;
like
an anchor
it
the bark of our faith fast and firm amid
storms of
holds
all
the
life.
How fervently we ought to love this sweet and precious virtue of hope How earnestly we should endeavor to develop it in our souls To this end let us consider: I. What hope is; !
!
What
II.
are the qualities this virtue should
possess.
We
What
is hope? frequently understand the virtue of that hope tranquil confidence by of a soul which relies upon the providence of
God of
with a
life.
filial
abandonment
This confidence
broadest sense, or rather hope. is
in
in all the
events hope in the the perfection of
God
it is
is
Christian hope, in the strict sense of the word, a virtue which aspires to the possession of
God
in
heaven and
relies
to attain this happiness.
on succor from above It is
defined a super
natural virtue, by which we hope from God eternal beatitude and the means of attaining it,
because Jesus Christ has merited it for us and has been promised us by God, who is infi nitely good, all-powerful, and faithful in His promises. This definition contains the object and the foundation of our hope. Object of our hope. Eternal beatitude and
it
the
means of attaining
from God.
it
are what
we hope
HOPE.
257
Eternal beatitude, or the salvation of our souls, consists in the possession of God and the joys of heaven- -the only good worthy the munifi
cence of the King of kings or the desires of our heart. All the rest, being perishable, can have no value to an immortal soul, which re All other things quires immortal blessings. are incapable of satisfying our desires only eternal salvation fully meets the aspirations of ;
the
human
cellence, is
heart
;
God s gift par ex made to assuage our
salvation,
the living water
great thirst for happiness.
We also
hope from
God
the means of attain
ing salvation- -that is, the graces and succors necessary to lead a Christian life here below :
a condition which
God
requires on our part to
obtain salvation and merit eternal glory. The succors of which we speak include not only spi
which help us to resist evil and law, but also our daily bread, health, things necessary and useful for our cor
ritual graces,
obey God and
all
s
poral existence in this world.
All these bless
ings we should expect from God and though He desires above all to give us graces useful to ;
the soul, He will in nowise refuse us succors of an inferior order which concern the body. The foundation of our hope includes four parts: the merits of Jesus Christ, God s infinite goodness to us, His almighty power, and His fidelity to
His promises.
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
258
The
merits of Jesus Christ are infinite, and giving His blood for us He poured out in ad vance the price of all that we may ask of God for time and eternity. It is for this reason the Church terminates all her prayers in these words to the Father: We beseech Thee through Jesus C/irist Thy Son, our Lord. Goodness. God is a Father whose goodness in
9
surpasses that of the best of fathers among men, that of the tenderest mother for her child. If a
He Himself tells us, can forget her He will not forget us. It is true, how that God s goodness is a severe goodness,
mother, child,
ever,
which does not fear to thwart His children to make them better and happier. Such as I love I rebuke and chastise, He tells us (Apoc. iii. 19). He does not always grant the earthly advan tages they ask of Him, because He reserves for them others of more value and if the tender ;
Jesus allowed His friend Lazarus to die and his sisters to be plunged in grief it was in no wise in default of goodness. ... If He does
not spare the cross to His dearest servants it is because He wishes to enrich them as much as possible with the glory of heaven, which is
This is the sense in only acquired by crosses. which His goodness to us has no limit. This is
why our Heavenly Father
is more disposed to grant us all blessings than an earthly parent to give his children the bread they ask. .
.
.
HOPE.
259
All-powerfulness of God. The power of God All the good He wishes equals His goodness. us He can execute. Nothing is impossible to Him, nor even difficult, either in the order of grace or nature. From stones He can raise up children to Abraham, from a persecutor an
from a heretic a doctor of His Church, from the greatest sinner a saint, provided man, always free to refuse grace, does not resist His
apostle,
Salvation, sanctification, said the
divine action.
Saviour to His disciples, is impossible to man, but all things are possible to God. Fidelity to His promises Men too frequently promise and do not execute. Not so with God. .
Every man
is
a
liar,
.
.
says the apostle, but
God
is
true (Rom No, he says Himself; I will 4). not make void, I will not contradict, the words that proceed from, my mouth (Ps. Ixxxviii. 35). Now God has promised us salvation and the iii.
means
of attaining it, Jesus Christ unceasingly repeats this promise to us. Yes, this promise
already irrevocable in a divine mouth, God willed to confirm by a solemn promise, in order, says St. Paul, that by two immutable things, in it is impossible for God to lie, we may have the strongest comfort, we who have fled for refuge to hold fast the hope set before us (Heb. vi.
whicli
1
8).
Such hope.
is
the immutable foundation
It rests at
of our once on the merits of Jesus
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
260
on the goodness of God, His power, fidelity to His promises. Our hope must be con Qualities of hope. stant and efficacious. Christ,
and His
It
of
should be constant not to fail in the trials If it be true that all virtue must be
life.
strengthened and made perfect through trial, hope and confidence in God more than all other virtues need to be thus exercised. Therefore God tries the confidence of His servants: He
Abraham by ordering Him
to immolate he tried Moses and Israel by leading them to the border of the Red Sea while Pharao pursued them Jesus Christ tried His disciples, permitting a storm to over take their bark while He slept and seemed to have forgotten them He tried the multitude
tried
his son
Isaac
;
;
;
Him, leading them into the desert where there was nothing with which to appease
that followed
their hunger. Lord to lead
In a word,
His
it
is
the
way
of the
border of the and them to manifest His thence tomb, bring goodness and His power.
The
Christian, then,
confidence trials,
faithful to the
of
must beware of losing
adversity, in temptations and yielding to sadness or discourage in
ment. Let him remember that then particular ly is the time to display strength of soul, con fidence in God. His confidence should even increase in trial and sustain us until the Lord
HOPE. come,
who
who
shall not fail to come to his aid,
ii.
ond
Veniens veniet, et non tar-
shall not be slack
dabit (Hab.
261
3).
Our hope must be
constant, and
it
must
also
be efficacious that is, it must co-operate ac Hope tively with God and with His grace. awaits from God not the total accomplishment of an action which leaves us nothing to do, but a succor which supplies our deficiency and ;
which supposes our co-operation, as the apos expresses it, saying: // is not I who accom
tle
plish the all that
Him
God within wishes, says Augustine, that we do within our power, and that we ask of
good work,
God
me.
is
that which
but the grace of St.
is
beyond
it.
Let us trust
in God,
says St. Ignatius, as if all depended iipon Him, let us, on our part, act as if all depended upon ourselves. This is expressed in the common but
and
excellent saying
:
God
helps those
who
help them
selves.
Moreover, it is a general rule of Providence man must use his faculties and all the means in his power, then await from God the resources he lacks, as much in the order of grace as in that of nature. Thus the farmer would have no har vest if he remained with his arms folded he must co-operate with God by his labor. God gives fertility to the earth and the dew of hea ven but man must labor and sow his seed,
that
;
;
then he
may hope
that
God
will
make
it
grow
262
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
and ripen his harvest. It is the same with sal man must vation and all the Christian life devote himself thereto, he must study, labor, watch, and combat; but in doing what is in his power he may hope and expect succor from God, who is never first to abandon His servants. He :
tries
them, but not beyond their strength
:
God
will not suffer you, says the apostle, to be tempted above tJiat which you are able, but will make also wit/i temptation issue, that it (i
Cor.
x.
13).
If,
you may
then,
God will infallibly And who would
be able to bear
you
fight valiantly to be victorious.
help you not hasten to labor and com bat with courage at sight of the infallible re wards with which victory shall be crowned?
The
sufferings of this time are not worthy to be -compared with the glory to come that shall be re
vealed in us
(Rom.
present momentary
viii.
18).
and
ligJit
That wJiidi
is
at
of our tribulation
ivorketh for us above measure exceedingly an eter
nal weight of glory (2 Cor.
iv. 17).
CHAPTER
XL.
CHARITY LOVE OF GOD.
i
Major horum COR. xiii. 13.
est caritas
ERE
(The greatest of these
is charity).
the virtue which bears the scep tre and the crown, the queen of virtues is
divine charity.
As
humility shines
at the base of Christian sanctity, so charity beams at the summit humility is like a diamond rock, ;
sun which illumines the
and chanty
like a
tical edifice
of virtues.
mys
Charity, veritable divine fire, inflames the heart with purest love and produces therein a double flame, springing- one portion of it to
wards heaven and the other towards earth one is love for God, the other is love for our There is only one virtue of charity, neighbor. but it embraces a double object- -God loved for Himself, and our neighbor loved for God. ;
In as far as
it
divine love
;
relates directly to God it is called it relates to our neigh
in as far as
called love for our neighbor, fraternal or charity, simply charity. Let us speak first of love of God, which may
bor
it is
263
SODALl TY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
264
be called the virtue par excellence, the principle and abridgment of all sanctity. St. Ignatius, enlightened by God to comprehend its price, asked but this in prayer Lord, he cried, dis pose of me and of all that is mine as Thou wilt, take from me all things, but give me Thy love and Thy grace Thy love alone sufficeth me. If a man, says the Holy Spirit, should give till the substance of his h .-use for love, he shall despise :
;
it
as nothing (Cant.
viii. 7).
Then we should ardently
desire so precious a blessing, and do all that depends on us to in flame our hearts with this divine fire.
To
this
for loving
end
let
us consider
God; and
II.
The
:
I.
The motives
qualities
our love
should have.
Motives proper to excite divine love in our These motives are: God s love for us, His benefits, His divine perfections. I.
hearts.
God
love for us.
Let us love God, says St. first hath loved iis (i John iv. The most 19). powerful motive to love is the love another bears us. naturally love those who love us and the way to make one s self lov s
John, because
God
We
;
ed
is
to love others, according to the well-known amari, ama. Now, God loves us,
maxim Si vis :
and has loved us for loved
tJiee,
He
all eternity: Yea, I have to of us, with an ever each says
lasting love, therefore have pity on thce (Jer. xxxi. 3).
I drawn
He
tliee, taking loves us like a
CHARITY LOVE OF
GOD.
265
tender father, and He desires that we should address Him by this sweet name. In spite of our ingratitude He continues to love us, as we see by the parable of the prodigal son of the Gospel.
He
Then us,
.
.
He
.
goes so
us that
far as to tell
more than a mother does her child. us love God, since He has first loved
loves us let
and loved us so tenderly.
God
s
What new motives do they not God If you are in want and
benefits.
give us to love a generous man
!
comes
to
your assistance, gives you food, a house, an honorable maintenance, would you not love this benefactor? But what benefactor is comparable to God ? What hast tlwu that thou hast not received of iv. 7). Your existence, a noble
made
to the
image of
Him
? (i Cor,
human
nature
God- -from whom have
The food which nourishes you, the clothes which cover you, the light which illumines your day, and all these exte you received
rior
them
it?
blessings--from ?
And
if
how many new
whom
do you
receive
you go into the order of grace treasures you find future !
A
of eternal glory and the most admirable means of attaining it, the merits of Christ, the Church
and her divine sacraments, are placed
at
your
then there is that special provi dence which caused you to be born in the bo som of the true faith, and watched, over you since your birth to the present hour. Who can disposition;
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
266 tell
:,
1
your benefits?
If
you had received from
one-millionth part of the good God has given you, you would not know how to show him your gratitude and love; what, then, will a
man
you render to God, your supreme Benefactor? Should you not love Him with all your heart, with
all
your
soul, with all
your strength
?
.
.
.
What would it be if we were to see God face to face as He is, infinitely lovely in Himself? Ah would we not be enraptured with love like the blessed in heaven, if, like them, we !
contemplate His infinite perfections? not our hearts be inflamed with the most ardent flames at sight of this wisdom, this holiness, this power, this beauty, of which all created beauty and perfection are but a sha could
Would
dow
?
Yes, the perfections of creatures are a
shadow, but nothing more than a shadow, a weak image of the Creator s perfections. All that we see of grandeur, of beauty, of holi ness comes from God, like rays from the sun, like streams from their source, and all things speak to us of the infinite perfections of which God is the source. Behold heaven and its stars, the earth and its fecundity, the sea and its immensity ... all these works of God bear the imprint of His hand and proclaim His Look at men and their admirable greatness. ;
works,
power
.
.
the magnificence of kings, the all these are but a sha-
of their armies
;
CHARITY LOVE OF GOD.
dow
of the greatness of the Contemplate the Church, her
267
of
King
kings.
hierarchy, her of worship, every kind which adorn her, particularly her living ornaments, those pearls of all virtues which are resplen the
dent
beauties
in the saints;
.
.
.
they are so
many
rays
of the eternal Sun.
Yes, the whole world announces the glory of it is a mirror which reflects, a book which
God
;
hymn which
relates, a
extols the infinite glory,
Author. ever ancient, ever new my heart beauty is made for Thee, as my eyes for the light. Why can I not contemplate Thee like the seraphim, in order to burn, like them, with love for Thee Quality of divine love. How should we love God, and what are the qualities our love should have? To be true and perfect our love of God should be efficacious, constant, and generous. beauty, loveliness of
its
O
!
!
Love
is
efficacious
when
it
produces the ef
fects, the fruits which God asks, and which con sist in the observance of His holy law and the
accomplishment of the divine will. He that hath my commandments and kcepeth tJiem, he it is that
m
m
v If any one love me he will keep ^vord (John xiv. 21, 23). It follows from this that love consists more in works than in words
lovetJi
.
or affectionate outpourings of the heart. No doubt the sweet emotions we feel towards God, the tears of tenderness, the praise, the
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
268
which we from but love, Him, spring they are only leaves works only are its fruit and its in
canticles, the testimonies of affection offer its
;
proof of love, says St. Gre Then would production of works.
fallible proof.
gory,
is
tJie
T/ie
you know whether you truly love the Lord your God ? Examine, not whether you experience a sensible and tender devotion, but whether you faithfully observe the law of God, whether you avoid sin, whether you seek the accomplishment of the divine will.
Love must be constant- -that fail
either* in prosperity
how
m my
is, it
must not Alas!
or adversity.
there are who, finding everything
succeed according to their desires, attribute success to themselves, become inflated with pride, and forget God, their sovereign Bene factor This is the shoal of prosperity. Others, !
by reverses, by afflictions, become dis couraged, break forth into complaints, mur murs, and rebel against God, whose fatherly hand has touched them for their good this is the shoal of adversity, in which many barks have been wrecked. How many are faithful
tried
;
to all their Christian duties, to all their pious
exercises, while
it is
calm and a favorable wind
their sails, but if storms, sufferings, humilia tions come their courage fails and they aban
fills
don piety
!
My
son,
says Jesus Christ in the andprudent
Imitation, thou art not as yet a valiant
CHARITY LOVE OF
GOD.
269
fa!lest off from ^vhat tlwu Jiast begun upon meeting witJi a little adversity, and loo lover, because tJwu
greidily seekest after consolation. A valiant lev r stands liis ground in temptations and yields not to the crafty persuasions of the enemy. As he is
pleased wiiJi me in prosperity, so I displease him when F send adversity (b. iii. 6). It is not sufficient to be with Jesus on Thabor, or even not
to follow
Him
to the table of the cenacle
must accompany with
Mary
Him
;
we
Calvary and remain the foot of His cross.
at
to
Love, says the Holy Spirit, is strong as death; the lamps thereof are lamps of fire and flames.
Many
waters cannot queue Ji charity, neither can
the flo ds
drown
it
viii. 6, 7).
(Cant.
Love should be generous. sists in
ing
1
Generosity con
mak
in
giving laboring, in suffering, in all sacrifices, and in making them joyfully ,
whom we love. He who loves Jesus Christ gives Him what he can in the person of His Church and His poor; lie labors for Him by fulfilling the duties which He imposes upon him He endures all the trials which He sends
for
one
;
him
he sacrifices his time, his rest, his most lawful satisfactions; he even goes so far as to ;
sacrifice his life for
God
;
and
all
this
with a di
vine joy which love alone can give. The love of Jesus, says the author of the Imitation, is noble and generous ; it spurs us on to do great tilings,
and
excites us to desire
alw lys that which
is
most
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
270
It equally bears ail that is unequal. The perfect. lover flies, runs, and rejoices ; he is free and not
He
gives all for ail, and he has all in all, because he rests in one sovereign good above all, from whom all g ood flo ws a nd proceeds. L ove fc -els
held.
no burden, values no labors, would willingly do tJuin it can. Love is thankful to God, alzvays trusting and hoping in Hi)it, even when it tastes
more
not the relish
of Gods sweetness ; jor there
no living in love without some pain or sorrow *
is
(b.
>.
in. 5), It
is
in this sense that St. Ignatius says that
the fire of love
is
fed with the
wood
of the
cross.
The ideal of this generous love is Jesus Christ giving Himself so prodigally, immolat ing Himself so generously for the children of men-
in His manger, upon His sacrament of our altars. His di vine Heart is the model of divine love, and at the same time the source whence we must draw / am come to cast fire on ihe earth, and wJiat it. will I but that it be kindled? (Luke xii. 49).
-Jesus Christ
cross, in the
CHAPTER
XLI.
LOVE OF OUR NEIGHBOR. Hoc (This
est praceptu
>n
meum
:
Ut diligatis invicem, sicut dilexi vos that you love one another, as I
my commandment,
is
have loved you).
JOHN
xv. 12.
HE
divine fire of charity produces a double flame, one of which makes us love
our
God
neighbor
for
Himself, and the other
God
for
loves, being but the
s
sake.
These two
same
charity, are so inti united that one cannot exist without the mately other. St. John bears witness to this in these
words If any man :
brotJier,
Jie is
a
liar.
say,
I
and hateth his commandment we have
love God,
This
from God, that he who loveth God^ brother (i John iv. 2O, 21).
love also his
It is by loving our neighbor that charity is most frequently exercised. God, being invisi ble, having need of nothing, rarely affords us occasion of exercising our charity towards Him but our neighbor affords us continual op ;
Therefore God has willed us to portunity. love Him in mankind, who are His children, and whom He substitutes for Himself. As lo g 271
272
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
as you did
it to one of these my least brethren, you did it to me (Matt. xxv. 40). Fraternal charity is a gift of God, a virtue by which we love our neighbor as ourselves for God s sake. In other words, it is the charity
by which we love God in His children, His images, His substitutes. Love of our neighbor takes various names, according to the diversity of its acts. Hence the charity of benevolence, of union, of forbear ance, of pardon, of kindness. ... It is a vir It contains all good, all tue of inestimable price. Above all things Jiave cha Christian perfection. rily, says the apostle, whic/t is the bond of per
fection (Col.
iii.
14).
That our hearts may be more and more inflamed with it, let us consider, should love this virtue; II. How practise
How we we should
1.
it.
Love of
fraternal
charity.
We
must love
this beautiful virtue with a love of predilection which shall cause us to seek it as the pearl of
the Gospel, as the treasure hidden in the earth, Follow after charity as our supreme treasure.
Cor. xiv. i). All motives urge us to seek it motives on the side of God and our Lord Jesus Christ, motives on the side of charity itself, motives on the side of our neighbor, and mo tives on the side of our own interest. Motives on the side of God and our Lord
(i
LOVE OF OUR NEIGHBOR.
God
Jesus Christ.
He
is
so
good
273
to each one of
He
treats us with and kindness, patience, longanimity should we not in our turn be kind and indul gent towards our brethren ? God is angry with us,
forgives us our
sins,
ineffable
;
the ungrateful man who, having experienced His mercy, did not fear to oppress his brother.
He
Thou wicked servant says, / forgave thee all the debt, because thou besouglitest me ; shouldst not tliou tJien have had compassion also on thy fellow,
servant, even as
I had compassion on thee? (Matt,
xviii. 32, 33).
we turn towards our Lord Jesus
If
Christ do
we
not find that His virtue of predilection, the virtue of His Heart, is charity? Is it not the virtue which He recommends to us in a most special
you
:
manner?
A
new commandment I give unto
That you love one another, as I have loved
you, that you also love one another (John xiii. 34). Is it not the virtue of which He has given us
the most powerful example, and which He most earnestly recommends by the lips of His apos tles
?
In this we have known, says St. John,
tJte
charity of God, because He hath laid down His life for us ; and we ouglit to lay down our lives
for the brethren (i John iii. 16). Motives on the side of charity itself. Is it not the most necessary and the most excellent of virtues? for
There
our neighbor.
is
no salvation without love
Whosoever hateth his brother
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
274
a murderer, says St. John, and he that loveth
is
not abidcth in death (i
John
iii.
15, 14).
What would become of a soul, a family, a community, human society, without, charity? Would they not be a prey to egotism, discord, pauperism, pagan despotism? Charity is the most excellent of virtues. The It is greatest of ail, says St. Paul, is charity. like the soul of all the other virtues it gives them their lustre and beauty the least actions receive from its influence an inestimable price. Let all your things, says the same apostle, be done in cJmrity (i Cor. xvi. 14). Motives on the side of our neighbor. We should love men because they are our brothers, created like us to the image of God, born like us of the blood of Adam, regenerated like us by the blood of Jesus Christ. At sight of a fellow-being we should say with the brothers of Joseph He is our brother and our flcs (Gen. .
.
.
;
;
j
i
:
xxxvii. 27).
Then
there are unfortunate beings most poor,
most wretched, most abandoned. can we fail to compassionate them
we
not help them,
means?
.
.
God
if
.
?
.
How How can
has given
.
us the
.
Motives on the side of our own interest. We are all sinners, and we have need to trem but let us be charitable ble at sight of our sins and we are sure of pardon. BLssed are tJie nitr;
LOVE OF OUR NEIGHBOR.
275
for they shall obtain mercy. Judge not, ihat you may not be judged. If you will forgive men their offences, your heavenly Father will forgive ciful,
you your
Do we
offences (Matt.
v. 7
vi.
;
14
vii.
;
our eternal salvation
fear for
i).
Let us
?
possess charity it is the mark of the children Would we of God, the character of the elect. ;
be happy?
Chanty
diffuses
the
in
where,
particularly dwells; it is a virtue which this world.
How
Practice of charity.
What
happiness every heart where it
God rewards
in
ought we love our
should our charity be?
neighbor? It should be true and efficacious. children, says the Beloved Disciple, love in word, nor in tongue, but in
My little let
us not
deed and in
truth
(i John iii. 18). True and efficacious- -that
describes
is,
such as St. Paul
kind; charity patient, Charity envieth not, dealeth not perversely, is not puffed up, secketh not her own, is not provoked to anger, it:
thinketh no things
(i
is
beareth all things, endureth all
evil,
Cor.
True and
is
xiii.
4-7). efficacious
that is, practising all the acts, fulfilling all the duties of charity, in terior as well as exterior respect, benevolence, kindness, consideration, forbearance, patience, :
pardon, conciliation, compassion, almsgiving, correction, edifying words, good example. .
Be
charitable,
.
.
.
communicating
to
the
.
.
necessi-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
276 ties
of the
saints.
.
Be
.
.
not overcome by
evil,
but
overcome evil by good (Rom. xii.) Our charity must be conformable to the dou
which our Saviour gives us: Love thy neighbor as thyself (Luke x. 27), as I have loved ble rule
you (John xv. 12). It should be universal, embracing friends It
and enemies.
.
.
all
men
.
should be exempt from the contrary faults
of rash judgments, suspicion, detraction, bitter
words,
antipathies,
irritability,
envy,
selfish
friendships, a spirit of contradiction, obstinacy in one s opinion, want of consideration or cour tesy.
.
.
But how are we
to acquire this beautiful
and
precious virtue which, forgetting itself, seeks in all things only the good of our neighbor? How are we to have the abnegation, the hu Ah! it is mility, the patience it supposes?
God, and we must receive from Him. The Heart of Jesus is its source, His love and benefits its centre. Let our hearts be inflamed by the Heart of the divine Master, and breathe only charity at sight of His chanty and His love for men; or, to speak less figura tively, we should on one side ask Him the grace of His love, and on the other earnestly endea vor to love our neighbor in all things as He has loved us. particularly a gift of it
CHAPTER
XLII.
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST. : Ut cogno scant te, solum Deum verum^ et Jcsum Christum (Now this is eternal life That they may know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ,
Hate est vita czterna
quern misisti^
whom Thou
:
hast sent).
JOHN
xvii. 3.
O know
Jesus Christ is to possess eternal because this knowledge produces love of God, the observance of His -in a word, all sanctity; and sanctity lawholy life,
includes eternal
life.
Understand that we do not speak here of a purely historical knowledge which manifests Jesus Christ to us as the founder of Christian ity and the Church, as a personage of ancient a supereminent person, it is true, but re mote, and with whom we have only faint and obscure relations. There is question, on the con trary, of the knowledge of Christ actual and present of knowing Him with a lively, inti
times
;
mate, loving, filial knowledge, like that which a child has of his father or mother this know ;
ledge, as
which
it
we
from seems to be confounded. see, is inseparable 277
love, with
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
278
To know
Jesus Christ
in this
way
is
com
to
prehend that we have continual relations with Him, that we receive from Him all blessings, and that in Him rest all our hopes. To thus know Him is at the same time loving and serv ing Him.
To acquire this salutary knowledge let us consider Christ first in His person, then in His benefits.
We
Christ considered in His person. may consider the person of Jesus Christ in two ways exteriorly in a purely human and historical I.
:
point of view, or interiorly as eyes of faith.
He
appears to the
consider Christ exteriorly He is that ex traordinary man who lived in Judea under the empire of Augustus and Tiberius. We behold Him also in Bethlehem, the place of His birth, If
I
Jerusalem, the place of His death and resurrection. His exterior, simple and modest, attracted no attention but when He opened His lips to preach His doctrine He excited such admiration that they regarded His words as superhuman, and cried out: Nunquam sic locutus est homo Never hath man spoken like this. His preaching vvas accompanied with innumer able miracles, which filled Judea and the neigh boring people with astonishment and respect. A great propJict is come among us, they cried God
and
in
;
;
Ji.is
visited
His
people.
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST. All beheld
279
Him, the good and wicked, and
the influence of the superiority of His doctrine and His works but this doctrine and
all felt
;
these works caused
Him
to be loved
by the
good and hated by the wicked. He is that Jesus who changed the
face of the ancient world, and who on the ruins of pagan ism established that Catholic Church which we
behold standing triumphant over all her ene mies during nineteen centuries, like a rock amid the waves of the sea. If I contemplate this admirable man with the eyes of faith I recognize that He is not simply a man, but a Man-God, God the Son, the second person of the Blessed Trinity. His contempo raries, with the exception of a privileged few, There hath stood were ignorant of this mystery. one in tJie midst of you whom yoii knew not, said
His precursor to the Jews. In fact, His humble exterior made Him regarded as an ordinary man and even when He had manifested by in numerable miracles that He was master of nature and the depositary of all power, the people did not suspect that He was the God of the universe concealed under human form. For more than two years He had astonished Judea by His miracles, when one day, coming ;
into the quarters of Csesarea Philippi, He said to do men say that the Son His disciples:
Whom
of
man
is?
Their answer showed that
all
re-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
280
garded Him as a prophet and a saint, but no one suspected Him of being of a nature su The apostles themselves had perior to man. little knowledge of His divinity only the apos tle St. Peter knew this great mystery, and con fessed that Jesus whom he saw before him was Clirist, tJie Son of the living God, the second per ;
son of the Blessed Trinity.
From
that
moment
all
the apostles
knew
that
Master was their God. But this know ledge and this faith were very imperfect, and on the day of Christ s Passion it failed almost to We had hoped, they then said, that Jesus tally would be the liberator of Israel. However, when they saw Him risen from the dead their faith awakened to stronger life, and Thomas, the most incredulous among them, cried out: My Lord and my God! His ascension, which they all witnessed, strengthened their faith, which received its final light and supreme confirma their
:
tion at the descent of the
Holy Ghost.
Then, with trans fully enlightened, they recognized had the which the world benefit received, port and they understood these words of their Master God so loved the world as to give His only-begotten Son (John iii. 16). We, like the apostles, have received the Holy We know with Spirit and the gift of faith. sovereign certainty that Christ our Lord is the :
true Son of God,
who deigned
to clothe
Him-
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST.
281
with our humanity and become our brother. is this faith lively and active in our souls? Is it not obscured and stifled, as it were, by the cares of this world ? May it not be said to us T/iere hath stood one in the midst of you whom you self
But
:
knew
not ?
And may
have shut,
lest
they not also say
:
Their
at any time they should see
eyes tJiey with their eyes ? Then we must remove these veils and clouds, in order that there may be no
obstacle to the light of faith, which will not be if we humbly ask it, saying with the
refused us
Adauge nobis jtdem--L,ord, increase (Luke xvii. 5). II. Benefits of Christ. No man, however be is to nevolent, Jesus Christ, the comparable apostles:
our
faith
great Benefactor of mankind. To give bread to the poor, to procure for the sick an unknown specific
a
man
s
which restores them to health, to save life by rescuing him from imminent
death, are benefits, very great benefits, to save a man s life by dying in his place is a benefit so
sublime and so rare that it is difficult to find an instance of it. And nevertheless all these acts are nothing in
comparison to the immense,
universal, and wholly ineffable benefits of our Lord Jesus Christ. What, then, are these bene fits? We may say that they are summed up in those of His incarnation, His doctrine, in the redemption, sanctification, and glorification of
mankind.
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
282
ist.
In His Incarnation
He lays aside
for love
His divinity, and, cloth with our Himself poor human nature, re ing duces Himself, God as He is, to the condition of man and becomes our brother He abases Himself to this degree in order to raise us to of us all the glory of
;
the dignity of children of God. 2d. His doctrine is eternal wisdom
;
it
teaches
man
the highest truths, the secret of peace and happiness. ... If this divine doctrine were
heeded and practised wars and calamities would disappear, the earth would become paradise in advance.
Redemption is the act by which the Son God redeemed us from eternal perdition to which sin had irrevocably condemned us. All, yes, all, would have been lost without Christ our Redeemer. If we have been saved from this 3d.
of
if hope burns before our eyes, it is be cause the only Son of God deigned to die for us. CJiristus pro nobis mortuus est (Rom. v. 9).
abyss,
4th.
The
sanctification of
our souls consists
purifying them from the monstrous stains of sin, and giving them that purity, that light, that heavenly beauty which renders them like the in
angels.
The Saviour accomplishes
this sancti
by the ministry of His Church and by means of the sacraments which He has estab lished for ever. What a benefactor of mankind is the Church and the sacraments what gifts,
fication
!
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST.
283
what sources of consolation, particularly the Eucharist, that sacrament of love, in which Jesus Christ dwells personally in our midst and communicates Himself to our souls through an .
ineffable
union
!
.
all
.
.
.
5th. Glorification.
of
.
The completion and crown
the gifts of our divine Benefactor
glorification.
Our
is
our
glorification through Christ
being transferred from this world to heaven to become partakers of His beatitude and His is
Man, soul and body, glory during all eternity. shall be wholly transfigured in His glory and made like unto Jesus Christ Himself. He will change the body of our low ness, made like to tlie body of His glory (Phil. iii. 21). What can we say of such benefits and such a
What shall I render to the Lord, Benefactor ? says the prophet, for all the things that He hath What can we give rendered to me? (Ps. cxv. 12) to this holy man, said Tobias, or what can be worthy of his
He quires This is as
benefits ?
(Tobias
Himself deigns to :
My my
tell
xii.
I,
2).
us what
me
He
re
son, give thy heart (Prov. xxiii. 20). commandment, that you love one anottu r,
I have loved you (John
xv.
1
2).
CHAPTER
XLI1I.
THE BLESSED
VIRGIN.
9
Qui me invenetit inveniet vitam, et hauriet salutem a Domino (He that shall find me shall find life, and shall have salvation from the Lord). PROV. viii. 35.
HESE
words which the Church places
on the
Blessed Virgin sig nify that devotion to this august and good Mother is the pledge of salvation and of He who shall find me that is, who all blessings. shall learn to honor me with true devotion- -will lips of the
through me true life, which is sanctity in world and eternal glory in the next. Devotion to the Blessed Virgin is, then, the most precious of treasures. This devotion is founded on the knowledge and love of this amiable and sublime creature, whom an arch angel proclaims blessed among all women, and whom all generations proclaim blessed. Let us endeavor to acquire more and more of this knowledge and salutary love by considering the Blessed Virgin in herself and in her relation to find
this
us. I.
The Blessed Virgin
in herself.
If
we con
sider the Blessed Virgin in herself and exteri-
THE BLESSED
VIRGIN.
285
was only an humble woman of Judea, without grandeur or splendor in the eyes of men.
orly, she
Though
issue of the royal blood
of David, she
lived in an obscure condition, and was given in marriage to St. Joseph, who was also but a
The house she inhabited in simple artisan. the little village of Nazareth, and which is pre served to this day at Loretto under the name of the Holy House, is but a frail edifice made to ac commodate the most modest household. When
Mary became
the Mother* of Jesus she busied
herself with the care her Child claimed, fled
with
Him
to
Egypt
to escape the persecution Him safe to Naza
of Herod, and returned with
Later she followed Him in His apostolic reth. course, and on the day of His Passion she ac companied Him to Calvary. After the descent of the Holy Ghost St. John, her adopted son, conducted her to Ephesus, where she lived several years, and finally re ceived from Heaven the announcement of her approaching end. Then, leaving Ephesus, she returned to Jerusalem to die where her divine
Son had
She was sixty-five years of age, to another opinion, seventy-two. according Her tomb is shown at Jerusalem, but it is re died.
or,
markable
that,
while the bones of
all
the saints
are gathered with religious care, the only relic preserved of the august Mother of God is the veil
which covered her head.
It is for
the rea-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
286
son that her virginal body, like her Son s, did not remain in the tomb; the virgin Mother of
God
entered, as Jesus did, soul and
body
into
heaven.
Such is the very simple history of the Bless ed Virgin Mary it presents nothing striking in the eyes of the world, not even the splendor of miracles which embellishes the lives of other ;
No
saints.
which glory
is is
(Ps. xliv
exteriorly Mary presents nothing not humble and obscure; all her within Omuis gloria ejus ab intus ;
:
14).
Considered interiorly, she is the holiest, the most august of all creatures which God has produced, the masterpiece of His hands. God, says St. Bonaventure, could make a more beau world, more brilliant stars, more magnifi cent heavens, but He could not produce a crea ture more august than the Virgin full of grace, Mother of His only Son and Queen of heaven. Full of grace. Grace, the most precious of all
tiful
was given her with a fulness which no other creature received. Through the privilege of her immaculate conception she was enriched from the beginning of her exis tence with treasures of grace, and at the mo ment of her birth she was higher in sanctity heavenly
gifts,
than other saints at the moment of death, so that she began the structure of her sanctification by placing its foundation upon the holy
THE BLESSED mountains
Fimdamenta
:
VIRGIN.
287
ejus in montibus sanctis
In fact, these graces which she (Ps. Ixxxvi. i). received from the beginning she not only faith fully preserved, but constantly increased by the all virtues and all good works. Her whole life was resplendent with the purest sanc tity, an image, a perfect copy of that of her di
practice of
vine Son.
O
mystery of the divine ma Who can explain its grandeurs? It ternity is a great thing to be a servant of God, to be His friend, His adopted child; but to be His Mother! A mother possesses an essential superiority over her child, who owes her respect, love, and When Mary saw her Son Jesus obedience. MotJier of God. !
.
grow
in
.
.
age she knew that He, who appeared men only an amiable youth, was
to the eyes of
Son of the Almighty she unceasingly re the words of Gabriel: Thou sJialt a Son, and He s/iall be called the Son bring forth the
;
membered
of the Most High.
Therefore, in contemplating
Son which the angel had announced to her she saw in Him, with the eyes of faith, the only Son of God, true God with His Father, and Creator of the universe. Now, this Son of the Most High was also, according to His humani ty, the true Son of Mary, and the tenderest. most respectful and obedient of sons. Some times He lovingly embraced Mary or knelt bethis
288
SODALIl^Y DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
fore her and prayed her blessing;
He
listened to
her wishes and obeyed the least sign of her will. What dignity for Mary, and what happiness!
The woman exclaimed
and
of the Gospel said truly when, at the sight of Jesus, she
wonder
struck with
Blessed
:
is
the
womb
that bore
TJiee,
gave Thee suck ! (Luke xi. 27). When He was still a weak and feeble infant Mary recalled these other words of the Angel Gabriel He shall be great, and the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of David His fa the paps that
:
ther,
and He
ever
(Luke
ourselves
The
shall reign in the house of Jacob for
i.
She saw, the world saw, we see the fulfilment of these words
32).
still
divine Infant
the world
grew
;
whom Mary brought He became that Jesus
into
who,
by His miracles and His doctrine, proved that He was the true Son of God- -that Jesus who died on the cross, who rose from the dead, founded the holy Church whose marvellous existence we behold in the world and whose children
we
are.
Ah
!
we behold
this divine
Son of Mary ever present in His work upon earth, until the day when, in sight of our hu manity, He will come in person and in all His glory to judge the universe. Yes, Christ is great He alone is great; He alone is the immortal King of ages, King of the universe, and it is He whom Mary calls her ;
Son.
THE BLESSED
VIRGIN.
289
if Mary is the Mother of the King of must share in His glory and occupy she kings a place near Him as a glorious Queen. Solo mon descending from his throne to receive
But
Bethsabee, his mother, and seating her at his right hand, is a figure of Christ placing the Blessed Virgin, His Mother, on the throne of glory suitable to her- -the throne of the Queen of Heaven. For this reason the entire Church tli us salutes her Ave, Rcginacoelorum ! Salve, Re:
gina,
ven
!
ct spes nostra, salve !-
Save
salvation
us,
O
-Hail,
Queen
of
Hea
our Queen, our hope and our
!
Queen of Heaven- -Queen, as Jesus Christ is King. Hence we may know what her kingdom is, what are her insignias of royal ty, and what is her royal power. Her kingdom is the universe, and in an es
Mary
is
pecial manner the Church- -the Church rnili* taut, that struggling people whom she guides
and
protects
as
an
invincible
Queen
Church triumphant, that people of the midst of
whom
Queen more
brilliant
she rules
;
the
saints in
as a glorious than the moon in the midst of the starry firmament. Her insignia, her crown, her jewels, her robes in a word, her royal splendor is like that of her glorious Son, and of an order infinitely superior to all that we see here below. It is called grace and glory, which she has received
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
290
grace and this glory give her a beauty which effaces all other creat ed beauty and enraptures the blessed. What shall we say of her power? It is the very power of her Son, of which she disposes by her supplications Omnipotentia supplex. Such is the grandeur, such is the glory of Mary considered in herself. The Church, then, Benedict* et venehas truly reason to exclaim in all their fulness
this
;
:
:
rabilis rs, Virgo qiiibus te
Maria,
et
omni laude dignissima
laudibns efferani nescio
:
!
The Blessed Virgin
in her relation to us. her relation to us, Mary is our Mother a Mother who knows and loves all her children, who can and will aid them, provided they themselves recognize her as their Mother and come to her with a filial heart. Mary is our Mother. The Saviour, in His ineffable goodness, gave her to us when from His cross He addressed her .these words, Wo man, behold tliy son ; and to St. John, Behold thy II.
Considered
Mot lu r
in
!
John, our Saviour s disciple, represents, in the opinion of the doctors, all His disciplesthat is, each of LIS--SO that these words of our dying Jesus are addressed to each of us, and to St.
He
Mary for our Mother. our Mother Do I believe this then, Mary with a truth consoling lively faith ? ... St. he when uttered these words, Stanislaus, all
of us
is,
has given
!
THE BLESSED is
my Mother
ther
seemed
!
the
!
VIRGIN.
291
Mother of God is my Mo and raised in
to be beside himself
ecstasy.
that
is my Mother she must love me like mother who held me on her knees when I
was
a
If
Mary
little
child.
Oh when !
I
think of that
cherished being, single in her virtues among all women of the world, that being whom I
the
called
my
mother according to the
alone moves
my
heart.
memory how intimate
are the ties
How
is
child
intimate !
child?
Ah
What ...
is
a
flesh,
her
How
sweet, unite us!
which mothers knowledge of her
comparable to her love for her
our earthly mother is but a feeble image Mother we have in heaven. Nemo tarn mater there is no mother like her; she knows us, she loves us, in a wholly different way from our earthly mother. She knows us intimately she loves all her children, even the most indifferent and ungrate ful she desires their good lor time and eternitv, and she has the power to procure it for them. Were they despairing she could restore them to hope and life; and this good Mother will !
of the
;
;
certainly cause rable kindness,
them if
to experience her admi they, on their part, do not
repel her maternal hand, if they do not refuse to be her children. Si qnis est parvulus, venial ad i/it Let little children come to me.
292
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
Now, we become children of Mary as soon as we recognize her as our Mother and go to her confidence, which is done by prac devotion to Mary. tising This holy and salutary devotion includes all acts of piety- -the invocation of the Blessed Virgin, her praises, the celebration of her feasts, the imitation of her virtues. But our devotion to Mary should be a special devotion- -that is, a devotion superior to that which we have for other saints, for they are only our brothers and our friends, while the august Mary is our Mother. May we possess this special and filial devo tion to the Blessed Virgin May we ever Then we shall have practise it more perfectly found life and shall have salvation from the Lord.
with
filial
.
!
!
.
.
CHAPTER ST.
XLIV.
JOSEPH.
Vir Maiia, de qua natus est Jesus, qui vocatur Christus (Jo seph, the husband of Mary, of whom was born Jesus, who is called Christ). MATT. i. 16.
UR
hearts are the temples of the living the Holy Trinity abides in them
God
;
and is pleased to see therein a triple altar: one raised to Jesus Christ, another to Mary, his holy Mother, and a third to St. Jo seph,
his
On
foster-father.
we
these altars
should burn the incense of our devotion, which rises in an odor of sweetness before the face of
We
Most High.
offer our incense to Jesus the by honoring only Son of God to her the Mother of God as Mary, by honoring to St. Joseph, by honoring him as the foster-
the
Him
iis
;
;
father of Jesus Christ and the spouse of the purest of virgins.
May our triple
of
all
hearts be ever perfumed with this In it we shall possess a pledge
devotion
!
blessings.
Let us speak to-day of devotion to St. Jo To excite this blessed devotion more seph. and more in our hearts let us consider St. Jo2Q3
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
294
seph
first in
himself, then as the patron and pro
who
tector of those I.
St.
Joseph
invoke him. himself.
in
consider St.
If I
Joseph with human eyesthat is, exteriorly I find nothing in him to distinguish him from or dinary men. True, the royal blood of David flows in his veins; but the splendor of his an cestry is hidden in the obscurity of his condi tion, and the eyes of men see nothing but an
humble workman, If
we
a
simple artisan.
penetrate into the interior of St. Jo with the eyes of faith we contemplate
seph, if him as he appears before God and the angels, we find him great with a dignity surpassing all human grandeur. This humble artisan has
found grace with the Most High the King of kings has chosen him among all men to be the spouse of the Virgin Mary and the foster-father ;
of the incarnate
Word.
To realize the sublimity of we must comprehend the grandeur her whom God Himself calls///// of grace and
Spouse of Mary. this
of
title
blessed
into to
among
all zvomen.
When
I
contemplate
the glory of the most august queens fades
Mary
shadow and the whole universe seems
bow
happiness to earth,
St. Denis had the her when she was still on
before her throne. see
and the superhuman majesty
visible in
made such an impression upon him that had he not known she was a mortal creature
her
ST.
JOSEPH.
295
he would have adored her as a divinity. What is a simple apparition of the Blessed with which some souls have been hon Virgin ored St. Now, Joseph saw Mary not in a He was fleeting apparition but in family life. able to live with her, converse with her in the most intimate familiarity he was her spouse, a favor
!
;
the object of the love, the conjugal respect of the holiest of spouses. What a source of sanc tity for this
happy
saint!
If St.
John the Bap
the visitation of the Blessed Virgin leap ed with joy at a simple word of Mary s and was tist at
sanctified
by the sound of her voice,
if
Elizabeth
was filled with the Holy Spirit by her presence, what abundance of grace, what treasures of benediction enriched the soul of Joseph during Mother of
the thirty years he lived with the
God
O in
!
.
.
.
Blessed spouse of
Mary
!
make us
sharers
thy interior riches. Foster-father.
Though
the
name
foster-fa-
ther indicates that St.
Joseph was not the na
tural father of Jesus,
it
nevertheless contains
an incomparable dignity. Do we, in fact, un derstand the sense of these two words, father of the Son of God, /^/^r- fa ther of the Son of
made man ? The dignity
of a father
to his child a superior
is
great.
A
God
father
is
and sacred being, an ob
ject of love, of respect, of perfect submission.
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
296
Such was Joseph, the spouse of Mary, to the divine Infant conceived of the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin, his Spouse. Therefore see how differently from Simeon he takes Him in The fortunate Simeon, who was His arms. only a stranger to Mary, received by a singular favor the divine Infant from her hands and was able to hold Him in his arms once for a few mo
ments; but St. Joseph takes Him when he wills and as long as he wills, for it is the Child of his Spouse, and therefore a treasure which belongs to him. Yes, this dear Child regards him as His father. See how He throws Himself upon his neck, how lovingly He embraces him then see how He respectfully inclines and kneels with Mary before Joseph to honor his fatherly ;
Ah here indeed is the true meaning dignity. of the dream of that other Joseph, who was the !
Joseph, son of figure of the spouse of Mary the patriarch Jacob, saw the sun and moon bow :
down
before him to adore him.
Does not this them all of him the before bowing dignity o
read:
Jesus
Christians, whom a God
And
and
Mary, and
after
./
<
made man
calls
His father?
not only does venerate St. Joseph He but obeys him F.rat subrespect, ditus illis. He, the author of the Fourth Com mandment He who imprinted on the human
with
He"
filial
:
;
heart and engraved on the tables of Moses this great law, Honcr thy father and thy mother-
ST.
that
is,
JOSEPH.
297
render them love, respect, obedience-
Himself to its fullest extent, and mani Himself to the world a perfect model of filial love, obedience, and respect. Which must we admire most, Jesus, who ful fulfils it
fests
fils
the
these duties, or Joseph, filial piety of a God ? .
who .
is
the object of
.
As foster-father St. Joseph received the sublime mission to provide for all the temporal wants of the Son of God. It was he who pre pared His poor cradle at Bethlehem, who pro cured for the tender Infant and His Mother all they required against the inclemency of the it was he who withdrew them from season the fury of Herod, softened for them the dis comforts of a long journey, and in their exile ;
sought for them shelter, food, and clothing until he brought them back safe to Nazareth. There he continued to labor for th em by the sweat of his brow. Oh with what love he endured the most arduous labor to earn a subsistence for Jesus and Mary. But what shall be his reward? !
For a loving heart the happiness of serving loved ones is sufficient reward, and St. Joseph asked no more but not thus did the generous heart of Jesus accept his devotion. He who rewards with an immortal crown a glass of cold water given for love of Him He Avho ;
;
commands
us
all
to
honor our father and mo-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
298
ther--what glory does He not reserve for such a benefactor, for the man whom He Himself Amen I say to you, he shall place called father !
Jiim over all his goods (Matt. xxiv. 47). In this world did not procure him
He
an an
ticipation of this reward by affording him the ineffable happiness of dying in His arms and
those of His Blessed Mother ? Yes, St. Joseph was the happiest of men he died in the arms :
and Mary. ... In heaven a throne has been erected for him apart a throne distin guished from all the others, for among all the
of Jesus
Joseph alone is the spouse of Mary and foster-father of the King of glory. Then St. Theresa, and the entire Church with saints St.
her, justly proclaim the power of St. Joseph and extol the excellence of his patronage. II. St. Joseph patron and protector of those .
.
.
who invoke
him. Honor all the saints, writes Theresa, but have a special devotion to St. Joseph. The other saints have power to ob St.
tain us certain
power
determined graces
of intercession
Yes, St. Joseph
is
St.
;
Joseph
s
is limitless.
a universal patron. that
same time it is not without reason voke him in a special manner
At the we in
:
ist.
2d.
As the patron As the patron
of Christian families.
.
of the great Christian
mily, the universal Church. 3d. As the patron of education. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
fa
.
ST.
JOSEPH.
299
As the patron of youth. 5th. As the patron of workmen. 6th. As the patron of temporal affairs. 7th. As the patron of chastity. 8th. As the patron of the interior life. 9th. As the patron of a happy death. May we worthily honor St. Joseph and me 4th.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
his salutary
.
.
.
.
rit
.
.
.
and powerful protection
.
!
O
obtain for us a great love for thy
holy Virgin august spouse and thou, O glorious St. Joseph give us thy love for Jesus and Mary. This grace alone will be for us the pledge of all good. !
;
!
CHAPTER XLV. THE
HOLY
ANGELS.
Administrator ii spiritus, in ministerium missi propter eos qui (Are they not all ministering spi rits, sent to minister for them who shall receive the inheritance hcp.reditatem capient salutis ?
of salvation ?\
HEB.
i.
14.
ESIDES
the Blessed Virgin, St. Joseph, the other saints, we must also
and honor the angels of paradise. Faith teaches us that God peopled heaven with an innumerable multitude of angels, who are, like the princes of His house and the as sistants of His throne, always in adoration be fore His sublime Majesty. They are also His ministers and servants, forming numerous le gions ever ready to fly to the execution of His orders throughout the whole universe. Three among them are known to us by name: St.
A
Michael, St. Gabriel, St. Raphael. great are charged to protect men; these we
number call
guardian angels. should honor our guardian angel in a it is a devotion which a good special manner Christian should never fail to practise. In order to excite this salutary devotion more
We
;
300
THE HOL Y ANGELS. and more what faith
301
our hearts
in
te.aches us
let us consider, first, of our guardian angel
;
what homage we should
and, second, with
honor him.
We know by faith that faith. His mercy has given us each a guar See that you despise not one of tliese dian angel. little ones ; for I say to you, says the Saviour, Doctrine of
I.
God
in
that their angels in Jieaven always see the face of
How heaven (Matt, xviii. 10). exclaims of souls! St. the dignity Je great rome, explaining this passage, since God has confided each one from its birth to the charge my
Father
in
is
of an angel.
To
truly appreciate the sense of these words us remark that this angel is a heavenly spi rit, a prince of heaven, superior in dignity, beauty, and power to the greatest monarchs
let
of earth.
.
.
.
Then great
is the dignity of our souls in He commits them to the since eyes, defenders. of such guardianship
God
s
Speeding with lightning swiftness wherever God sends them, devoted to His will, these blessed
spirits
attach
themselves
to
their
guard them as treasures con them by God. They love us as the children of God, as the price of the blood of charges
and
fided to
Jesus Christ.
Our good
angel
is
ever at our side, day and
302
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
home and
in the midst of our our journeys he is with us everywhere to protect us from all evil, to pre serve us from all that could injure our souls and our bodies, and to help us to perform the
night, at
occupations and
good God asks of
He
abroad,
in
;
us.
and helps us to pray he of fers our prayers to the Most High. He encourages us to observe the law of God, to fulfil all our duties he counts all the steps we take for God. invites us
;
;
.
.
.
He inspires us with horror of sin. Seeing the snares and scandals with which the world filled, he withdraws us from it as much as he can, and turns our feet from all dangerous
is
places and the occasions of sin. At the moment of temptation he defends his .
.
.
charge against the assaults of the infernal lion. He encourages us to resist the enemy prompt to arm our ly, with energy and perseverance selves with prayer to even add to prayer labor and fasting. If he have the misfortune to see his charge consent to mortal sin and fall into enmity with God, he endeavors to make him rise from this ;
;
.
.
.
deplorable state either by suggesting to him thoughts of sincere repentance or by rousing his conscience with salutary remorse. If it happen that the sinner, rebellious and deaf to grace, hardens his heart, throws all .
.
.
off"
THE HOL Y ANGELS.
303
and abandons himself with frenzy to and the movements of the evil the one, good angel does not abandon him he for him, and awaits a lucid moment when prays restraint,
his evil desires
;
he
will
perhaps accept grace. particularly at the hour of death that our good angel assists us and defends us- -1 hat supreme moment when the evil one redoubles his fury, knowing that he hath but a sJwrt time (Apoc. xii. 12). Then, also, he helps us to re It
is
sign ourselves to God s will, to devoutly make Him the sacrifice of our life, to timely and wor thily receive the sacraments, to endure with pa tience the sufferings of illness and the
agony of
death.
After death, if .the soul be found in a state of mortal sin the angel of the Lord abandons her at once, for she belongs to the demons. They fall upon her as their prey, drag her first before the tribunal of God, then precipitate her into hell.
If
the soul which has
state of grace, but
still
the body be in a charged with a debt of left
temporal pains which she has not paid in this life, he leads her to purgatory, where he docs not
fail
to console her.
When free
from
the soul
is
purified from all stain
and
debt, having fully expiated her sins or the other, the angel guardian, in
all
in this life
company with other heavenly
spirits,
introduces
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
304
her in triumph into the abode of the elect. It for this reason that the Church in her funeral service sings: In paradisum deducant te angcli ! Such are the benefits which our angel guar dians wish to bestow upon us if their desires is
;
are
not
always realized
charges place obstacles their
little faith,
it
is
in the
because their
way because
of
their little confidence, their little
devotion to guardian angels. II. Devotion to the angel guardian. Ac to the of St. we should Bernard, cording opinion honor our angel guardian by respect, confi dence, docility, and by imitating his virtues. We should respect his presence Respect. and never do anything which could grieve him or offend his eyes. To this end we must re
member his presence, particularly when we are alone, when we are in prayer, and when tempta tion solicits us to sin. ... If suddenly the veil were removed, and this heavenly per sonage appeared visibly before us, how great Would we dare to would be our respect commit the least sin before his eyes ? of faith
!
.
.
.
.
.
.
Confidence confidence exercised by prayer and invocation. Our angel guardian is more powerful than all our enemies he can protect us in all perils, help us in all needs, but we ;
must ask his assistance. Good Christians voke their good angel in the morning, they voke him in the evening, they invoke him
in in in
THE HOL Y ANGELS.
305
the dangers of travelling, in their needs and temptations the}^ are pleased to repeat this simple but pious prayer: Angel of God who ;
my
guardian, since the divine goodness has confided me to thy care, deign to enlighten, art
guard, direct, and govern
me
this
day
in all
things.
Our good
angel suggests to us not holy thoughts go in such a society, he tells us, do not read such a paper, do not utter Docility.
:
Do
such words. ... Is there question of a duty to be fulfilled, of a good action to be performed ? The voice of our angel is heard in the depth of our heart Do what your parents, your masters :
command you well
;
;
assist at
Mass say your prayers ;
endure that offence or that
trial
with pa
Such are the inspirations of our good angel. We must listen to them and follow them with docile obedience and if we feel too tience.
.
.
.
;
our strength or courage fail us, we must ask his assistance, saying My good angel, help me; sustain my by thy prayers. Our angel guardians give us the Imitation. of all virtues, particularly of obedience, example and piety. charity, They give us an example of obedience, since to obey the orders of God they come from hea ven to earth to guard us, with whom they con tinue to remain, accompanying us in all our ways during all the years of our life Cum esscin weak,
if
:
:
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
306
vobiscum, per voluntatem Dei eram (Tob. xii. 18). Is our obedience to the orders of God, which
are manifested to us by our superiors, as per fect, as
persevering ? They give us an example of charity. Charg ed with our guardianship, they love us tenderly, though frequently we show them little grati tude they seek only our good, without any hope of return from us. If the good angel s counsels be despised, if he fail in his efforts against the malice of his charge, who enrols him .
.
.
;
on the side of impiety, who blasphemes spreads calumny and scandal to ruin souls, then, even though it would seem but just to exterminate this enemy of God, he does not strike him, he still prays self
God and His Church, who
still asks for mercy, like Christ, who and wept to the end for the guilty Jeru prayed
for him, he
salem.
Though They give us an example of piety. they are upon earth and accompanying their charges to the most profane places, they never God, and they are Their angels see in and adoration. prayer always the face of my Father who is in heaven, says the Saviour. After their example we should walk lose sight of the presence of
in the presence of God, frequently offering Him the incense of our prayers, prostrating our selves before His face with the deepest respect.
Ah
!
if
we honor our angel guardian
in this
THE HOL Y ANGELS. way
;
if,
307
instead of opposing an obstacle to his
we second
it by our co-operation and our what What docility, joy we shall cause him powerful succor we shall receive from him How easily we shall walk in the path of vir tue and persevere unto the end therein
zeal,
!
!
!
CHAPTER
XLVI.
PASSION OF JESUS CHRIST. Verbum
quidem stultitia est ; Us autem qui Dei virtus est (The word of the cross to them indeed that perish is foolishness but to them that are I COR. i. 18. saved, that is, to us, it is the power of God). crucis pereuntibus
salvi faint, id estnobis^
;
F
Jesus Christ
He
the light of the world,
is
He
nowhere does
enlighten souls as if He is the
does upon the cross
;
Master come to instruct the world, nowhere does He give such lessons as from the height here upon this holy cross has most loudly spoken. It is upon this mysterious tree that the root of Jesse blossomed and gave forth its sweetest odors. It is upon the cross that Christ is the of the cross.
It
that the divine
ensign of nations Jesse,
:
In that day shall be the root of
who
xi. 10).
standeth for an ensign of peoples (Isaias It is upon the cross that He is the sal
vation of soever,
is
Word
all
those
who
look upon
being struck, shall look on
(Num. xxi. 8). O book written by the open Source
of living
eternal
water to 308
Him it
all
:
Who
shall live
Wisdom
!
Jerusalem.
PASSION OF JESUS CHXIST.
O
Tree of
309
Tree of true knowledge, whose
life,
fruits
give immortality The cross. Jesus suffering upon the cross teaches us all things, all the truths of divine !
wisdom
;
.
.
.
others hatred of
among
for the world, love of
sin,
contempt
God and our
neighborthree fundamental lessons, three great practical rules, which should be traced in the depths of our hearts. Let us try to be more and more penetrated with them by considering in what way Jesus crucified teaches us hatred of sin, contempt for the world, love of God and our neighbor.
Hatred of sin, which is God, the beginning of that mysterious rock upon which
Hatred of
I.
sin.
also called the fear of
wisdom,
is
the wise
man
fice
built his house- -that
is,
the edi
it
is,
of his salvation.
To
hate sin
prehend that
we must know what it
is
an
evil,
com
the greatest of
all
evils.
Now,
the cross
shows how great an
evil sin
in itself as well as in its
punishment. an offence against God, an out rage offered to the supreme Majesty- -an out rage the extent of which is shown us by the cross, by the reparation required for it by di is,
In itself sin
is
vine justice.
Behold Jesus, the true Son of God, in whom is well pleased, dragged before the tribunal
He
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
310
of men, spat upon, tormented, executed like the worst of criminals. Why? To repair the .
.
.
outrage offered to God must we think of a crime expiation In its
?
.
.
by sin. What, then, which needed such an
.
The punishment
punishment.
of sin
is
eternal damnation, supreme misery, which the cross makes us understand by showing us the
What
ransom which redeemed us from
it.
we
see the only
to
think of
hell
when we
are
Son of God descend from heaven, be made man, humble Himself to become a worm of the submit to all the ignominies, all the tor ments of His Passion, to save us from its fire? Ah the blood of God, poured forth as ransom, earth,
!
is
of infinite price
;
eternal damnation,
then,
which required such a ransom, is a supreme It is this misfortune, in a measure infinite. which Jesus would have us understand by those grave words uttered on His way to Calvary :
Weep not over me but weep over yourselves ; for if in the green wood they do these things, zvhat y
shall be done in the dry ? II. Contempt for the world.
I
understand
by the world not only the perishable goods of this world, but also the spirit, the ideas, the maxims, and the principles which commonly Now, the reign among people of the world. world is infinitely contemptible, because it is as foolish, as pernicious as
it is
criminal.
We
PASSION CF JESUS CHRIST.
311
the mystery of the cross, which what the world thinks of Jesus Christ and what Jesus Christ thinks of the
see
this
shows
in
us
world.
What does the world think of Jesus Christ Him who is the supreme God and the Eter nal Wisdom ? To show what it thought of Him it is sufficient to say that it despised Je
of
sus Christ, repelled Jesus Christ, crucified Jesus Tfie world knew Him not. His own receiv Christ.
ed Him not. If the world hate you, know that it hath hated me before you (John i. 10, 11 xv. 18). What does Jesus Christ that is, the Eternal Truth think of the world? To show what He thinks of the world it is sufficient to say that ;
He
regards it as the reign of Satan. Speak ing of His Passion, He says Now is t/ie judg ment of the world ; now shall the prince of this :
ivorld be cast
##/(John
xii. 31).
The world and
Satan, in the eyes of Jesus Christ, are one and the same enemy the world is a perverse peo ;
the ple, Satan is the chief who governs them world is a body, Satan is the spirit which ani mates it. It is for this reason Jesus Christ has declared against it a war unto death He fought it unrelentingly, he conquered and crushed it: ;
;
vici mundum And what has
Ego
(John xvi. 33). been this combat?
What
has
been this victory? It is particularly on Calva ry and in the streets of Jerusalem that we see
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
312
Christ warring- with the world
He
tramples under foot
its
honors,
He its
goods,
...
its
pleasures. sustains the shock of all
rision, its
It is
all its
It
its
riches,
there that
menaces,
its
its
calumnies,
is
there that
its
de
its injustices,
outrages, plunders, its violence, its torments. He sustains the shock of all its assaults; .
.
.
He He permits power; Him all its iniquity and
defies all its rage, all its
to exhaust against
it
all its
fury
Nunc
:
brarum- -This of darkness
is
Jiora vest r a et potestas tene-
in
your hour,
may work
freely.
which the power Christ in His
Passion, abandoned to the mercy of a perverse people, appeared like a rock which defies the
waves and tempests .
are
III.
love
?
.
.
autem crat pctra.
CJiristus
after
conduct ourselves
to
world
:
we understand
Shall
.
.
in
the cross
how we
regard to this
.
Love of God and our God and our neighbor
Christian
this
neighbor.
comprises
To all
Now,
sanctity.
teaches us
Jesus Christ upon love God and our
to
neighbor with the most perfect love.
He
teaches us to love has loved us
how God
:
God by showing us He JiatJi loved us and
hath delivered Himself for us (Eph.
v. 2).
Let
us therefore love God, because God first hath lov ed us (i John iv. 19). Let us love God, do
what
is
pleasing to
Him, even
sacrifice, suffering, death.
.
.
.
at the price of
PASSION OF JESUS CHAIST.
313
He
teaches us to love our neighbor by immo Himself for love of men and by praying lating" for
His executioners.
What
an example of
Tliis is my commandment, that yon love charity one anotJier, as I Jiave loved you. Greater love !
man
man lay doivn l^is xv. Father, for 12, 13). life for (John give them, for they know not wJiat tJiey do (Luke xxiii. 34). Let us note these words Love one than
tJiis
no
hath, that a
his friends
:
anotlur, as I Jiave loved yon.
Let us
.
.
.
our eyes, then, upon the suffering Saviour; we shall find in Him a model of all virtues, and at the same time we shall draw from His wounds divine strength to imi tate until
given
us.
fix
death the great examples
He
has
CHAPTER
XLVII.
THE HOLY SACRIFICE OF THE MASS. Ab art it soils usque ad occasum, in omni loco sacrificatur et offertur nornini meo oblatio munda (From the rising of the sun even to the going down, in every place there is sacrifice, and there
is
offered to
my name
E have
a clean offering).
MALACH.
i.
n.
before our eyes the accomplish
ment of the.se prophetic words, which were uttered five hundred years be fore Christ. Putting- them in the mouth of the prophet Malachias, God announced to the world the future institution of a universal and perpe tual sacrifice- -the sacrifice of the Mass which is
The pro daily offered in the Catholic Church. phet calls it a clean offering that is, a holy and perfect sacrifice, infinitely pleasing to God, and proper to obtain for us
What,
then,
is
all
His favors.
the sacrifice of the Mass, and
how should we offer it ? What is the holy sacrifice I. all
of the Mass
?
the centre of Christian worship and of our holy religion. The sacrifice of the
It is
3 4
THE HOL Y SA ORIFICE OF THE MA SS.
315
Mass, says St. Francis of Sales, is the sun of pious exercises, the heart of devotion, the cen tre of Christianity.
When you
enter a Gothic cathedral, however little you consider the harmony of the edifice, you observe that all the parts, all the lines, all the mouldings relate to one sole central point the altar, which is like the centre, ruling all, and In like manner the sacrifice in which all meet. of the
Mass predominates
in all religion.
All
passes through the hands of Jesus Christ, priest and victim, at the altar through Him only do ;
we
through Him praise from heaven mercy and
God worthy
offer
we
only do
receive
;
salvation.
The Mass surpassing by the Old Law.
is
New
the sacrifice of the
Law,
value all the sacrifices of the beginning of the world,
itself in
From day when man fell into sin and in curred God s wrath, there have been sacrifices
since the
offered to appease Him. Abel chose the finest of his flocks to immolate to the Lord Noe ;
offered holocausts after the deluge Melchisedech, the priest-king, offered God a sacrifice ;
Abraham and the patri archs, his sons, erected altars in divers places to offer sacrifices, invoking the name of the
of bread and wine
;
Lord. Later,
when God had drawn His people from
the bondage of Egypt,
He
established through
316
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
the ministry of Moses a sacerdotal tribe, of which Aaron was the head. Aaron was to
God incense, bread, bleeding victims and holocausts in which the flesh of immolated ani
offer
mals was consumed by fire. These were sacri of worship, eucharistic, propitiatory, or supplicatory, according to the end for which they were offered. When Aaron entered the sanctuary to sacri fice he was clothed in a purple robe, above which he wore a tunic of dazzling whiteness, and on his breast he bore an ephod enriched with precious stones, upon which were graven fices
the names of the twelve tribes of Israel.
was
a figure of Jesus Christ,
Here
who went up
to
Calvary clothed in the white tunic of His in nocence, covered with His blood as the pur ple of the priesthood, and bearing graven in His Heart the names of all those He redeemed by His death- -that is, the names of all men.
The cross was an altar where the Son of God, both priest and victim, immolated Himself for the salvation of the world. This sacrifice con^tained in itself alone the different oblations of the Old Law, and surpassed them as reality sur passes shadow, as the Son of God surpasses the animals which were immolated on the altar as a figure of His death on the cross. The bloody sacrifice of Calvary needed to be offered but once. It abundantly sufficed to glo-
THE HOLY SACRIFICE OF THE MASS.
317
the divine Majesty and reconcile earth with heaven; no other oblation was required. But as the Church had need of a sacrifice to render God perpetual worship and adoration worthy of Him, the Saviour deigned to provide it; in His infinite wisdom He found the secret of per petuating through all ages the one sacrifice Hence the in which He offered on the cross. rify
stitution of the holy sacrifice of the Mass vine institution which the Saviour made,
a di
on the
eve of His death, at the Last Supper. The Mass is an unbloody renewal of the sac rifice -of
the
Here
cross.
is
the doctrine of
concerning proposed by the Council of Trent The divine sacrifice wliich is offered in the ss contains the same Jesus Christ, immolated in an unbloody manner, who was immolated in a We have upon our bloody manner on tJie cross. altar the same victim and sacrificer as upon the
faith
it
:
M
He is offered now by the minis altar of Calvary. He was offered by Himself ; as the priest, try of there is only the difference of t/ie mode of oblation (Sess. 22, chap,
Ah
ii.)
the veil of faith behind which the holy mysteries of the Mass are accomplished were !
if
to be raised for a altar
the
changed
Lamb
of
moment, we would see the
new Calvary,
into a
God
in
most as Mary beheld the cross.
He
Jesus Christ
a state of immolation, al
Him
descent from offers Himself to His heaat the
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
318
venly Father, showing Him the wounds which He has preserved in His glorious body. Le gions of angels surround Him, buried in adora tion
nies
it is
;
its
the heavenly court which
King.
.
.
accompa
.
The Mass is a source of propitiation- -that is, are of pardon for the living and the dead. all sinners and have need of pardon during life
We
after death. During life we obtain through the merits of the divine Victim the grace ot a But the malice of men is sincere conversion.
and
so great, their sins so multiplied, that they con tinually call down upon themselves the chastise
ments of God.
God
Now, what
is
it
that
retains
wrath? Ah
it arm, that appeases His is the divine Victim of propitiation which never ceases, while sins cry for vengeance, to cry with a louder voice for mercy: Father, forgive tliem,
s
!
for tJiey know not zvliat they do. After death comes, for the majority of the faithful departed, the expiation in purgatory. There must be a means of comforting the poor souls in their sufferings; the great means estab lished by the Saviour is the holy sacrifice of the The souls to whom it is applied are Mass. sprinkled, as it were, with the blood of Jesus Christ; and this divine dew refreshes them, tempers the ardor of their flames, and even ex tinguishes
them completely.
The holy
sacrifice
of the
Mass, then,
is
a
THE HOL Y
SA CRIFICE OF
THE MA SS.
319
source of propitiation for the living and the dead.
But it
to reap
its
precious fruits
we must
offer
devoutly.
How
should
we
offer the
holy sacrifice Properly speaking, the sacrifice of the Mass is only offered by the priest decreed by Jesus Christ to fulfil this august function. At the same time, in a broader sense and in a mediate manner, as we say, the faithful offer the Holy Sacrifice by an intermediary and through This they can do either the hands of the priest. Mass celebrated for their inten the by having tion or by assisting at it devoutly. When we have the holy sacrifice of the Mass offered for a certain intention the most power ful supplications rise to the throne of God for the favor we desire. It is Jesus Christ Him II.
of the Mass
?
the divine Victim, who supplicates His Father and presents His Blood and His Wounds. Nothing is more laudable than to have Masses celebrated for one s self or for others, for the
self,
living or the dead.
.
.
.
When we assist at Mass we take part in the holy action which the priest performs at the As the priest is delegated by the Church altar. to publicly offer the sacrifice in the
name
of
all
the faithful, the latter veritably concur in the sacrifice by the very fact of assisting thereat by uniting themselves in mind and heart with the
320
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL. This
celebrant.
is
words which the
We
manifested by the
pronounces in offering" does not say, I offer Tiiee, but,
He
the chalice.
clearly
priest
offer Thee, Lord, the chalice
of salvation. Therefore to assist well at Mass it behooves us to unite our intention with the priest, saying silently in our hearts or with our lips: Lord
God Almighty, the minister of
unite myself with the priest, Thy altar, to offer to Thy divine I
Majesty the sacrifice of the Body and Blood of Thy only Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. After uniting your intention w-ith the priest
summon
before your eyes by a lively act of great mystery which is being accom plished on the altar, and remember that the Mass is but the unbloody renewal of the bloody sacrifice which was offered on the cross. What would it be if, knowing Jesus Christ as we now know Him, we had been able to remain with St. John at the foot of His cross when he was faith the
nailed to
it
!
... Now, we have the happiness
of assisting at the sacrifice of this same Victim, who is immolated under the appearances of
bread and wine.
Let us go. then, in spirit with the priest to this new Calvary; let us remain there with the angels and with all truly Chris tian souls to be sprinkled with the blood of the
spotless
When
Lamb.
the priest has reached the time of communion, if we have not the happiness of com-
THE HOL Y SA CRTF1CE OF THE MA SS. municating sacramentally
it is
321
a very holy prac
make
It con a spiritual communion. sists in the desire of a devout heart which sighs lor the real reception of the Body of Jesus
tice to
Then when the moment of commu come we piously repeat with the these words of the centurion of the Gos
Christ.
nion has
priest Lord, I am not 7v or thy that Thou sJwuldst pel enter under my roof ; say but the word and my At the same time we soul shall be healed. :
produce
in
our soul a holy and earnest desire
to receive our Saviour in sacramental
commu
nion, saying Deign, Lord, as soon as possible to nourish me with Thy vivifying flesh, that I may be :
with Thy life. During Mass we should pray with recollec All prayers are good, and tion and devotion. The the Church prescribes none in particular. faithful are accustomed to recite those which filled
they find in an approved book, or to say the beads, or to meditate upon the mysteries of the Passion which the Mass recalls to them. Though the Church does not oblige her chil dren to hear Mass but on Sundays and holy^ days of obligation, she earnestly desires, never -/
theless, that they also assist at
it
during the
more conformable to the Nothing Christian spirit than to hear Mass every day when our occupations permit us to do so, and nothing draws more abundantly the blessings week.
is
322
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
of God upon a family than to be daily repre sented at the divine Sacrifice by some of its
members.
May we
fully understand the treasure in the holy sacrifice of the Mass, possess
we and
by a lively devotion abundantly gather there from consolations and graces all the days of our lite !
CHAPTER
XLVIII
PIETY. Filius honorat patrem et servus ,
dominum suum
; si ergo pater
meus : et si Dominus ego sum, ubi est iimor meus? (The son honoreth the father, and the servant his master if, then, I be a father, where is my honor ? and if I be master, where is my fear ?). MALACH. i. 6.
ego sum, ubi est honor
;
IETY
one of the most amiable virtues by its charms, but it its precious is to enrich them with Godliness is profita as St. Paul For, says, it
fruits.
is
;
attracts hearts
having promise of the life that now ts, and of that which is to come (i Tim. iv. 8). It is one of those virtues which are called the capital virtues, because they are the principal and source of many others. It consists pro perly in that good disposition of the heart which makes us render to our heavenly Father the wor ship which is due Him.
ble to all things,
We
speak evidently of religious piety, which is intimately allied to the virtue of religion and wholly analogous with filial piety this latter relates to our parents on earth and the former to our Father who is in heaven. Filial piety perfects the heart of a child and ;
323
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
324
him to render his parents the devotion which he owes them that is, that honorable love and respect to which we give the name of Filial piety is partly exterior and devotion. partly interior it has its seat in the heart and leads
;
its
manifestations are without. In like manner religious piety sanctifies the
heart of the children of
God
;
with the interior and exterior
it
inspires
homage
them
of love
and respect which they owe to their heavenly Father.
May we love this beautiful and touching vir May we always practise it as our title of
tue
!
Christian and Child of
Mary
requires
!
should we love piety, desire it, and ardently seek it ? Because of its excellence, of its necessity, and of the blessings I.
Love of
Why
piety.
procures us. It relates to God First, an excellent virtue. not as a Master but whom it Himself, regards as a Father. ... It makes us children of God that is, it renders our sentiments and conduct becoming children of God. ... It renders us in this world like the angels of paradise an it
gels of piety. Second, a necessary virtue. .
.
.
Without
it
we
are Christians and sodalists only in name, The spiritual life by which the Christian soul must live is impossible
without piety, for piety
is
bond of union between God and the soul
the a
PIETY.
325
bond similar to that which unites the branch which nourishes it. The soul is the branch God is the tree to which the branch must remain united to receive life and vi to the tree ;
gor.
.
.
.
Third, a virtue fruitful in spiritual blessings. Godliness, says the apostle, is profitable to all things, having promise of the life that nozv is, and of that which is to come (i Tim. iv. 8). Be pious and you will have a happy life here below and eternal happiness above. Be pious your piety will preserve you from all shoals and will open to you all interior treasures. Piety is a ;
.
.
tree of
life
God
planted in the heart of the children and by nourishing to
to nourish them, communicate to them the
of
.
life
which
is
proper
The root a holy and happy life. of this tree is faith its fruits form the magnifi cent variety of all other virtues, and we may them
to
.
.
.
;
apply to
my
it
these words of the wise
man:
My
as the purest balm. I have stretched out branches as the turpentine-tree, and my branch
odor
is
of honor and grace. As the vine I have brought forth a pleasant odor ; and my flowers are the fruit of honor and riches (Ecclus. xxiv. es are
21-23). II. Practices of piety.
be
?
It
What should our piety should be vigorous, exemplary, and
solid. ist.
Piety
is
vigorous when
it is
not languid
326
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
but full of ardor and hardy like a plant which has a strong root. The root of piety is faith Faith, says the lively faith, a spirit of faith. holy Council of Trent, is the beginning of the salvation of man, the foundation and root of all justification (Sess. 6, chap, viii.) 2d. Exemplary piety is that which
ample all
at
home and abroad
;
it
is
an ex
is
manifested
in
that belongs to the worship of God. 3d. Solid piety is not that which consists .
.
.
solely in a few exterior practices; it is at the same time interior and exterior, for these two parts rest upon and mutually sustain one an
other. Interior piety consists particularly in the vir tues of faith, confidence in God, and charity. ... It is this interior fire which exercises its
and its activity without. Exterior piety includes all the exercises of
life
These exercises are effects proceeding fire, and serving it in turn as fuel, without which it must be extinguished. This is what our piety should be we have its model in the Blessed Virgin, our Mother, ... its source in the adorable Heart of her
piety.
from the interior
;
divine Son.
CHAPTER
XLIX.
HUMILITY. Qui
se humiliaverit, exaltabitur
self shall
be exalted).
MATT,
(He
that shall
humble him
xxiii. 12.
UMILITY
is not only one of the capital it is distin virtues of the Christian a besides by splendor equal to guished ;
charity. celestial
Humility and charity are the two poles about which the resplendent
collection of virtues, like a starry heaven, re volves. St.
Bernard defines humility a true know makes us confess our base We may say, in other words, that the ob
ledge of ourselves ivJiich ness.
ject of this virtue
is
to
make us recognize
all
our baseness, and at the same time accept the place which belongs to us. Thus humility has a double object: one the baseness of man- -that is, his nothingness and his unworthiness--the other the place or con dition which corresponds to this baseness we must recognize the one and accept the other. Hence the two parts of humility, which are ;
327
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
328
called humility of the intelligence and humility of the heart or ill.
w
Happy they who have at
seen the brilliancy of
pearl and desire to acquire
this inestimable
it
any price Three practical considerations here present themselves on the subject of this precious vir tue Why must we love the virtue of humility ? Upon what basis is it founded ? How must we !
:
practise
it ?
We should love humili Love of humility. the of because example of Jesus Christ, ty, first, then because of the price and the great bless I.
ings
which
this virtue contains.
Our Lord
ist.
Jesus Christ, the Incarnate
Wisdom, loved and embraced humility-
-in His from the crib of Bethlehem to Cal vary in His Church, which He calls His little flock, and which He desires always humble and lowly in spite of its growth in His eucharistic life, remaining with us under the veil of the sacrament which we justly call not only the sacrament of His love but also the sacrament
mortal
life,
;
;
of his humility.
.
.
.
Humility is a treasure a treasure of It is to the humble God grace and peace. gives His gracegrace to the mind, which He enlightens, ... to the heart, which He enrich 2d.
es with all virtues, It
is
humility,
.
.
says St.
.
particularly chastity.
Bernard, which merits
HUMILITY.
329
charity- -Ut cast it as detur, humilitas meretur. is
just the contrary with pride
the
proud\ but
Pet. v.
the
to
humble
He
:
God
It
resistetk
giveth grace
(i
The humble enjoy great peace
5).
:
my yoke upon you, and learn of me, be I cause am meek and humble of heart ; and you Take up
shall find rest to
your souls (Matt. xi. 29). Humility is the condition and at the same time the measure of sanctity. If Christian per fection is an edifice to be constructed, humility .
.
.
The deeper
foundation.
says St.
this foundation, the Augustine, higher the edifice can
rise.
.
is its
.
.
Humility cend.
a ladder by which
is
we may
as
He
that shall humble himself shall be ex The true path of glory is that which
alted.
Jesus Christ followed He humbled Himself for which cause God also hatk exalted Him (Phi:
ii.
lipp.
to
all
practicable strength to ascend,
and descend
?
A
...
8, 9).
.
.
;
,
way which
for if
all
is
have
.
.
.
easy and not the
who cannot humble
himself
.
11 Foundation of Jiu mility. Hum ility is fou n ded upon a true knowledge of ourselves. The man who is penetrated with this knowledge, in stead of elevating himself above what he is or arrogating to himself a greatness which he has .
not,
keeps his true place and the rank
assigned him
God
has
among
The knowledge
beings. of myself
is
of three kinds:
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
330
the knowledge of my nothingness, the know ledge of my un worthiness before God, the
knowledge of my littleness and my weakness. ist. The knowledge of my nothingness. Of I am 1 was from all more than myselt nothing eternity, and which I would have remained for all
eternity ence- -that
if
God had
me
not called
into exist
nothingness, pure nothingness. exist through the goodness of God,
is,
Now that I my Creator, what am
I
but this same nothing
ness clothed with existence and other benefits
God
of is
?
a gift of
tle,
all
Yes,
God
that
am,
I
all
that
I
have,
What have you, says the apos
:
that you have not received?
(i
Cor.
iv.
7).
In nothing may I glorify myself, but I must use all that I have to pay my debt of gratitude to
sovereign Benefactor. This is w hat was done in the most perfect manner by her who exclaimed in the ecstasy of her humility My soul doth magnify the Lord ; and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. Because He hath regarded the humility of His
my
.
.
.
r
:
handmaid (Luke 2d.
i.
Knowledge
46-48). of my unworthiness.
That
me unworthy, positively odious, of God is my sins. If I had com
which renders in the sight-
mitted but one venial sin
it
would
suffice
to
make me worthy of being trampled under foot by everybody. ... If I have committed one mortal sin
I
have merited
hell
and lowered my-
HUMILITY.
331
rank of the demons. ... sin more than once
self to the
beneath the demons mortal sin.
is
.
3d.
.
I
have
my
place
If
.
committed mortal
they committed but one
:
.
of
Knowledge
my
and weak-
littleness
All that is good in me, either in the or der of nature or grace, may be reduced to very And to accomplish the least good, little.
ness.
.
.
.
to take the least step in the
way
of salvation,
I
have constant need of the assistance of divine grace, like a little child who cannot walk with out its mother s hand to guide and support it. The exercise of hu III. Exercise of humility. three includes things: never principally mility to exalt one s self, never to complain, never to withdraw one s self from the feet of the Saviour. We must be ist. Never to exalt one s self. watchful never to exalt ourselves in thought by nourishing great ideas of ourselves, of our abi ... by preferring our lity, of our knowledge selves to our neighbor, by preferring our opin nor ions, sentiments to those of others ;
;
by
desires
.
.
.
aspiring to elevated positions, seek
nor by words- -boasting of ing to be seen what we are or what we do; by excusing our selves either in the confessional or elsewhere; ;
.
.
.
by imposing our opinions on others by speak ing in a positive, imperious tone, always assum nor by ing ourselves to be in the right; actions doing our good works to be seen by ;
.
.
.
SODALITY DIRECTOR
33 2
men
S
MANUAL.
or with a sort of claim upon the con sideration of God, as if we rendered God a needed service, while it is a favor He does us in permitting us to serve His divine Majesty. The Saviour here tells us our true position in these words When you shall have done all these that are commanded you, say : We are un tiling* servants : we have done that w/w/z we profitable to do And elsewhere ougJit (Luke xvii. 10). He tells us You have not chosen me, but I have ;
:
:
chosen you (John xv. 16). 2d. Not to complain either of humiliations, or but to ever labors, or trials, or corrections, .
say in the depth of our hearts
:
.
.
I
have deserved
more. 3d.
Not
to
withdraw ourselves from the
feet
of the Saviour, but to ever remain there pros trate in spirit- -ist, to ask mercy and pardon; 2d, to unceasingly implore the divine assistance, since without it we can absolutely do nothing :
Without me, says our Saviour, nothing
is
possi
ble Ls V w *
As
a
means of attaining
tice of humility
know tions
the
it
maxims
to the perfect prac
also very profitable to of this virtue the occupa is
;
and circumstances
particularly exercise
it
;
in
which we should
and, finally, the source is no other than
whence we must draw it, which the divine Heart of Jesus.
CHAPTER PATIENCE. In patientia vestra possidebitis animas vestris (In your pa LUKE xxi. ig. tience you shall possess your souls).
E may
say that patience is the charac virtue of the Christian, as the
teristic
cross, the It tinctive mark. it
sustains
all
symbol of patience, is his dis is solid virtue par excellence ; the others and gives them strength
and constancy.
Therefore it is an indispensa our Saviour teaches us, saying souls ; /;/ your patience you shall possess your and the apostle, writing to the Hebrews Pa ble necessity, as
:
:
tience is necessary
for you,
tJiat,
doing the will
of
God, you may receive the promise (Hebr. x. 36). To better form ourselves to a virtue so im
portant
let
us consider
its
value and
its
prac
tice. I.
Value of patience.
It is
to Jesus Christ, since from His birth and made it
virtue
the most precious
He embraced
it
His inseparable all the course of his- life to companion during His last sigh. It depended only upon Himself 333
SODALITY DIRECTOR
334
S
MANUAL.
-\
to lead a tranquil life free from suffering. Not being subject to sin, he did not need, like us, to be subject to the trials of life; but through
choice, through -preference, He willed to suffer during all the time of His sojourn upon earth.
When was He
without suffering or
trial?
Is
there any kind of tribulation which He did not endure ? Is there any bitterness He did not taste
?
He
shall drink, says the prophet, of the
All these trials, all these la torrent in the way. bors, all this bitterness He endured without
complaint or murmur, without sadness, with a constancy, a resignation, a serenity, and a joy
Behold a perfect model of pa truly divine. all for tience ages. 2d. If the Son of God has given us such an example
it
is
sufficient to
lence of this virtue still
;
but
show us the excel it
will
more precious and more
appear to us
attractive
if
we
consider the great blessings it procures us. If the It gives us a resemblance to Christ. his resemble must is it not the master, disciple cross which shall imprint upon the Christian a character of resemblance with his crucified
Master ? Yes, it is through holy patience that we must be conformed, as the apostle says, to the image of the Son of God that is, we must be
Him, first in suffering, then in glory. Patience makes us powerful in word and work. The patient man is better than tJie val-
like
PA TIENCE. and
iant ;
lie
tJiat
335
ruleth Jus spirit than he that
Patience more (Prov. xvi. 32). than any other virtue spreads that good odor of Jesus Christ which gains souls. The Sa viour overcame the world by the cross, by patience and in the same way His disciples taketh
cities
;
must win fruit
:
all their victories and bring forth They bring forth fruit in patience (Luke
viii. 15).
Suffering endured for Christ becomes Jesus penance and expiation. is it in not the Now, salutary waters of penance and suffering that we must wash the stains of our souls? Are they not the mysterious bath in which the elect have whitened their robes ? made They have washed their robes, and purifies the soul.
It
h
them white vii.
in
the
blood of the
Lamb (Apoc.
14).
It
cross
enriches us with virtues and merits. The is a tree upon which blossom charity,
sweetness, and all virtues a tree the branches of which produce fruits of honor and glory. ;
For that which is at present momentary and light of our tribulation, worketh for us above measure exceedingly an eternal weiglit of glory (2 Cor. iv.
I reckon
that the sufferings cf this time are worthy compared with the glory to come that shall be revealed in us (Rom. viii. 18). 17).
not
It
pier
to be
renders us happy still
in the next.
happy in this life, hap Do you desire peace,
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
33<>
true happiness ? Here is the secret of it, as re vealed to us by the pious author of the Imita In the tion : 7 hy peace shall be in much patience. cross is salvation ; in the cross in the cross is
ness ;
is
joy of
infusion of sweet When thou
spirit.
shalt arrive thus far that tribulation becomes sweet
and savory
to thee
for
love
of
Christ, then think
well with thee, for t iou hast found a paradise upon earth (Imit., b. iii. chap. xxv. And has not the Saviour said b. ii. chap, xii.) that
it
is
;
:
Blessed are they that mourn ; they that suffer persecution for justice sake ? (Matt. blessed are
v. 5, 10).
Your sorrow, to joy
(John
He
says again, shall be turned in shall share the glory
xvi. 20).
We
of the divine Master in proportion as
we
shall
have shared His sufferings If we suffer with Hun we may be also glorified with Him (Rom. :
viii.
II.
17).
Practice of patience. Our patience must Christian patience consists not
be Christian.
only in faithfully enduring sufferings and trials, but in bearing them virtuously for God, to ob serve His holy law. There are men who suffer with courage, that they may not aggravate their woes by im patience others because they must yield to necessity and of two evils choose the least ;
;
others to satisfy a passion, to obtain some tem poral advantage. This is a worldly, pagan,
PATIENCE.
337
On the Stoical, and purely human patience. other side there are also those- who suffer for God, in
for their sins, in
union with
Christ,
view of eternal blessings crucified
Chris
this is
;
am
With Christ I
tian patience.
nailed to the
says the apostle (Gal. ii. 19). Christian patience is a continual daily exer cise. Everything is matter for patience duties
cross,
:
to be fulfilled, labors to be maintained
with
whom we
live,
with
whom we
inconveniences,
Everything
persons have to do ;
;
infirmities, temptations. . . in this world furnishes matter for
patience to him
and according to
.
who wishes to live God in all things.
Christianly
Christian patience is not difficult when we fix our eves upon our suffering Jesus. See, ex claimed St. Magdalen of Pazzi, what the Son
of God endured for my salvation ! Could I com plain when I have before my eyes the sufferings of a crucified God ? St. Theresa suffered with so much happiness that she could not live without suffering. This admirable patience she drew from three sources from the thought of her sins and hell, from the thought of paradise, and from the Let us add thought of Jesus crucified. that we shall draw it also from the adorable Heart of Jesus, and from that of Mary, His holy Mother, which was pierced with a sword :
.
of grief.
.
.
CHAPTER
LI.
THE VIRTUE OF MEEKNESS. Beati mites, quoniam
meek,
ipsi
possidebunt terram (Blessed are the
MATT.
for they shall possess the land).
ERE
is
tues
v. 4.
one of the most attractive of
Christianity- -the
meekness, gentleness.
It
vir
virtue
of
consists
in
an unalterable tranquillity of heart mingled with goodness and love--a tranquillity which remains unmoved in the midst of the most irri
When it abides in the tating contradictions. heart it diffuses over the countenance a perpet ual serenity which no cloud of sadness or anger can darken. Blessed are the meek, says the Sa viour, for tkcy shall possess ihe land. Then let us love meekness let us endeavor ;
to practise
it
more and more
us consider the
To
this
end
let
excellence of this virtue and
in which we should practise it. Excellence of meekness. This virtue was so dear to Jesus Christ that it caused Him to receive from the prophets the name of Lamb.
the
manner
1.
Send forth,
O
Lord, said 338
Isaias, the
lamb, tke
THE VIRTUE OF MEEKNESS.
339
He shall be led rider of the earth (Isaias xvi. i). as a sheep to the slaughter, and shall be dumb as a lamb before his shearers (Isaias liii. 7). The prin which represented Him was the lamb: Christ our pasch is sacrificed (i paschal Cor. v. 7). Behold the Lamb of God, said St. cipal figure
John the Baptist, seeing Jesus coming to him, behold Him zuho taketh away the sins of the world (John
i.
29).
He
desires that His disciples resemble Him, that they be lambs like their Master: Behold, I
send you as lambs among wolves (Luke x. 3). And confiding to St. Peter the government of
His church,
He
says: Feed
my
lambs ; feed
my
sheep.
Meekness is a virtue which He most earnest recommends to us Learn of me, because I am meek and humble of heart (Matt. xi. 29). You
ly
:
have heard that it hath been said : An eye for an But I say to you not eye, and a tooth for a tooth. to
resist evil ; but if one strike thee
cheek, turn
him
to
on
tJiy
Meekness produces the most precious Blessed are land.
They
iJie
right
also the otJier (Matt. v. 38, 39). fruits.
im ek, for they shall possess the
shall possess the land they shall all the land, like the most power ;
be masters of
Such kings, for they shall win all hearts. was Moses, the meekest of the men of his day: He was loved of God and men, say& the Holy
ful
Spirit (Ecclus. xlv.
i).
What power
did
not
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
340
the meekness of the admirable St. Francis of Sales exercise over souls doctor,
great
tracts souls.
.
.
Meekness, said
!
this
a heavenly honey which at may also say that it is
is
We
.
penetrates and softens the or a rampart of wool which blunts the force of the most violent projectiles. A mild answer breaktth wrath, says the wise man, a holy
oil
which
hardest hearts
but a harsh
;
word
up fury (Prov. xv. i). Meekness accomplishes all things, renders all things easy, practises all virtues with facility, There is according to the words of St. Leo stirreih
:
nothing difficult to the humble, nothing hard and vexatious to meek and tractable minds. Blessed are the meek, for they shall possess the But how are we to acquire meekness?
land.
How II.
are
we
to practise this beautiful virtue?
Practice,
practise
it
in
ist.
the
We
daily
must
endeavor
to
occasions which
we
encounter.
Thus, to avoid all hardness, all impatience with others- -with friends and enemies, with those who contradict or importune us, with our inferiors or superiors, with ourselves, our To avoid disposition, our own weaknesses. all impatience or brusqueness in our labors, our .
infirmities,
our sufferings.
.
.
.
.
To watch over ourselves, that moderation and meekness may constantly reign in our ac 2cl.
tions
and our proceedings,
in
our words,
in
our
THE VIRTUE OF MEEKNESS.
341
silence, and particularly in our hearts. heart should be pure of all bitterness and breathe only kindness and meekness. This
very
The
calm and friendly meekness of heart shines in and diffuses throughout the whole exterior a cordiality which charms and
the countenance captivates souls.
To
must be added succor must go to Jesus as the we must draw sweetness from His divine Heart. Learn of me, He says, because I am meek and humble of heart. By joining meekness with humility He gives us to understand that if we are humble we shall have no difficulty in practising meekness. Let us go, then, to His divine Heart, which personal
from on
efforts
We
high. source of all virtues
;
overflows with the sweetest unction. Oh good and siveet, exclaims the wise man,
!
how
is
thy Lord, in all things (Wis. xii. i). Let us go to Him in His Passion, where, like the olive crushed in the press, He gives forth floods of the sweetest oil let us go to Him in Spirit,
O
;
the
Holy Eucharist, where He personally mani
fests
at the
all
the marvels of meekness and promises
same time that
all
for justice shall be filled.
who hunger and
thirst
CHAPTER
LII.
STRENGTH AND COURAGE. Confortare et viriliter age i
PARAL.
(Take courage,
act manfully).
xxii. 13.
ERE
is
the virtue of noble hearts: the
virtue of courage, strength of soulthe courage which knows neither fear
Nothing is more beautiful than that manly courage, and energy which endures labor and suffering, despises ridicule and af fronts, and triumphs over all obstacles to fulfil But for the true a duty and to do good. nor defeat.
Christian,
end of
his
who
desires
necessary as
it
is
kingdom of heaven violent bear
attain
to
the
blessed
destiny, the virtue of courage
it
noble
and
suffereth
away (Matt.
xi.
is
beautiful. violence, 12).
and
To arm
as
The the all
His disciples with this courage our Saviour instituted a special sacrament- -Confirmation. Then let us love this virtue and try to ac quire it more and more. To this end it will be profitable to thoroughly know its nature
and .how to practise it. I. Nature of the virtue of courage. 342
Courage
STRENGTH AND COURAGE. is
343
the virtue of heroes, of martyrs, and of great
men. ist. We call heroes those intrepid and gen erous soldiers who, armed for their king and country, know no fear, and, undaunted by labor or sacrifice, count it a privilege to shed their blood on the field of battle.
The more just the war the greater the cour age and energy of the true hero. Now, a war is waging for the greatest and most just cause it is the war of Jesus Christ against Satan and sin, and the things at stake are heaven and hell. This noble combat requires heroism, strength of soul, to combat the enemies who harass us on all sides Put you on the armor of :
:
God, says the apostle, that you*
stand against the deceits of wrestling
is
not
tlie
against flesh
may devil.
and
be able to
For our but
blood,
principalities and powers, against the rulers of the world of this darkness, against the spirits of wickedness in high places (Eph. vi. 1 1 12).
against
,
Courage is the virtue of the martyrs a virtue which causes them to triumph over 2d.
torments and
We
the terrors of death. are the incredible constancy of in numerable Christians i n the midst of torturethe constancy of weak virgins, tender children,
astonished at
which no invention of the persecutors can over come. How were they able to suffer thus?
They armed themselves with
the virtue of
SODALITY DIRECTOR
344
MANUAL.
S
courage and were invincible through the Holy Spirit.
3d.
A
man
great
the virtue of
is
Courage
is
all
great men.
who accomplishes
one
great
things, endures great trials, or triumphs over great obstacles for truth and justice, for the his fellow-men.
good of
men who
shine
all
eclipses
in
others
;
Among
history there it
is
He who
Who is this glory. claims the prophet, and he
King of Lord
w/io
is
strong
all
and
is is
King of is
miglity
:
the great
one who called the
glory ? ex
Tlie answered the Lord miglity :
in battle (Ps. xxiii. 8).
When
him in His Passion, calm and not His mouth while His ene meek, opening mies exhausted against Him every effort of hatred, iniquity, calumny, contempt, outrage, I
see
when 1 see Him preserving His di cruelty vine serenity even unto death, which He en ;
dured for His very persecutors, He seems like a rock in the midst of the sea, against which the foaming waves spend all their fury in vain. All true Christians must struggle and suffer, after the example of Christ, their King and The servant is not greater than his If they have persecuted me they will per secute you (John xv, 20). Yes, all, says the
their Chief.
master.
apostle, that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution (2
Tim.
shedding their blood,
at
iii.
12), if
least
not unto
through
trials
S TRENG TH
AND
CO URA GE.
345
and temptations which are inseparable from a truly Christian II. Practice.
life.
How
we
are
to acquire
practise this beautiful virtue ? must free ourselves ist.
We
trary If
vices-
courage
and
from the con
-human
is
respect, sloth, indolence. the virtue of noble hearts, indo
and human respect are the marks of cowardly, servile souls. The slave of human respect gives up his dearest liberty liberty of conscience the first lence, sloth,
;
libertine he
As
meets
may
him with a
rule
a Christian he should
fulfil
smile.
his duties:
hear
Mass on Sunday, frequent the sacraments, ob serve the law of abstinence and fasting, refrain His con from reading wicked journals. science tells him this, and he would like to obey his conscience but he is afraid afraid of never dreaming passing for a weak mind, that this fear is weakness and the most shame .
.
.
;
.
.
.
cowardice. Sloth, sensual pleasures enervate the soul and render it incapable of sustaining combats,
ful
.
.
.
labors, sufferings. The victorious Hannibal was overcome by the enervating climate of Capua. Sloth is a shameful and degrading vice. The heart which it rules is like a stagnant pond in which all kinds of disgusting reptiles breed. .
2d. faith.
The
.
.
principle of Christian courage is If you have faith as a grain of mustard-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
346 seed,
you shall say
to this
mountain. Remove from
thence thither, and it shall remove ; and nothing The shall be impossible to you (Matt. xvii. 19). just, St. Paul tells us, by faith conquered king doms, stopped the mouths of lions, became valiant in battle, put to flight the armies of foreigners
(Heb.
xi. 33, 34).
Faith strengthens us by penetrating us with the great thoughts of death and eternity. .
3d.
Another principle
.
.
of strength is prayer.
This holy exercise unites us with God and causes us to share the courage of the Almighty. If you abide in rne, and my vvords abide in you, you shall ask whatever you will, and it shall be It was He who done unto you (John xv. 7). caused St. Paul to say I can do all things in Him :
me
who
(Phil. iv. 13). strengtheneth we to grow in Christian cour desire If, then,
age and walk in the path of heroes and great men, we must be penetrated with the great truths of faith and unite prayer to practice on one side trample under foot human respect on the other side labor and combat, place all our confidence in God, and assiduously pray to Him. Moreover, as Children of Mary we shall be armed with an invincible courage by her who crushed the serpent s head and who ap peared to the world and hell terrible as an ;
;
army
in
battle array
acies ordinata (Cant.
:
Terribilis ut castrorum
vi. 9).
CHAPTER
LIII.
MORTIFICATION. Mortificate
membra
vestra,
qua sunt super
your members which are upon
earth).
ORTIFICATION of which
is
terrain
COLOSS.
iii.
(Mortify
5.
a virtue the object
to repress the irregular in clinations of nature, to subject the in
man
ferior
words
:
terrain
earth
to the superior
This
spirit.
;
The
is
is
the
man, the
flesh to
meaning of the
the
apostle
s
Mortificate membra vestra, qu&.sunt super Mortify your members which are upon make the earthly man die within you.
virtue of mortification differs from the
virtue of penance, the object of which is not to subject the flesh to the spirit, but to repair the It differs also from injury done to God by sin. the of which proper act is the aban abnegation,
donment of created things, the renouncement of all that is not God, in order to attach the heart to God alone and to God s good plea sure.
The place
virtue of mortification occupies a great It should be a con-
in the Christian life. 347
SODALIT Y DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
348
tinual practice;
it
is
an instrument which we
should have ever at hand in the work of sanctification. Let us try to understand well a virtue so important, and also how necessary, how pre cious it is, and how we should practise it. I.
Necessity of mortification.
hend the necessity
of mortification
To compre it
suffices to
consider Jesus Christ and to consider ourselves. ist. Let us consider Jesus Christ; let us hear what He tells us Himself as well as by the
He said to all : If any apostles. will come after me, let him deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me (Luke ix. 23). Unless mouths of His
man
the grain of wheat falling into the ground die, it self remaineth alone ; but if it die, it bringctJi forth much fruit. He that loveth his life shall lose it ;
and
keepeth
it
he that hateth his life in this zvorld life eternal (John xii. 24, 25).
unto
Mortify, therefore, your members which are iipon earth (Coloss. iii. 5). They that are Christ s
have crucified their flesli, with the piscences (Gal.
vices
and concu
v. 24).
Let us hear also how He speaks to us by His example Jesus Christ suffered for us, leaving you an example that you sJiould follow his steps WitJi Christ I am nailed to the (i Pet, ii. 21). :
We ahvays bear about in our cross (Gal. ii. 19). the body mortification of Jesus, that the life also of Jesus may be made manifest Cor. iv.
in
our bodies
(2
MOR TIFICA TION. Should we not imitate
we
Christians can
live
in
349
this
example?
sloth- -be
As
delicate
members of a head crowned with thorns? Are we of better condition than our Master and Lord, than the apostles and saints? 2d. Let us consider ourselves as Christians, as sodalists, as Children of Mary. .
As
.
.
Christians mortification
is a necessity for our to overcome us--ist, passions and re-es tablish the harmony of our nature, disturbed by
sin.
Reason should command and not obey
an evil tliat I have seen under the sun, says the wise man I have seen ser vants upon horses ; and princes walking on the ground as servants (Ecclus. x. 5, 7). 2d. To ex Are we not all sinners ? Is it piate our sins. not better to expiate our faults in this life than in the other? 3d. To faithfully observe the law of God and avoid sin in future. Mor tification is the knife with which we cut off our vices as the vine-dresser cuts off the bad There
the senses.
is
:
.
branches.
.
.
.
.
.
As Children
of
Mary
mortification
is
equally
necessary for us, in order to attain the per fection which the Mother of God asks of us.
Whoever would advance in the way of virtue and form himself to Christian perfection needs mortification, as the sculptor needs a chisel, the builder a
hammer, the boatman oars
the stream.
to
go up
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
35
Fruits.
II.
Precious effects of mortification.
Christian mortification causes the old man to die within us, the sensual and carnal man, to use the words of St. Paul it weakens and de ;
stroys the life of sin, and at the same time creates and fortifies this new life in Jesus Christ, which is made manifest in our bodies
and our senses That the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in our bodies. Now, in what does this new life consist? ist. In a lively faith, immovable confidence, pure and ardent charity. :
.
.
.
It is only by pass 2d. In a spirit of prayer. ing* through the altar of holocausts, as St. Au gustine says, that we reach the altar of perfumes,
the symbol of prayer. 3d. In future glory. .
Him, (Rom.
tJiat
we may
viii. 17).
low ness, made
He
.
.
So if we suffer
witJi
also be glorified with Him will reform the body of our
like to the
body of His glory (Phil.
\
111.
21). j
III.
To practise we must remove its great
Practice of mortification.
mortification well
Christian morti obstacle- -fear, apprehension. fication is not so difficult as we think; it is softened by the unction of divine grace. The
world sees the thorns, says St. Bernard, but not the unction and balm of Jesus Christ, which accompanies them. Let us keep the example of the Saviour and of
all
the saints before our
MOR TIFICA TION. and soon we
eyes,
shall
divinely marked way
which
walk with ease
it
;
35
is
only the
I
in this
first
steps
cost.
2d. Let us apply ourselves not only to ex terior mortification but also to interior morti
our own will, our humor. These two of one the other mortification, interior, parts exterior, mutually complete and sustain each fication
our
to mortifying self love,
tastes,
and
.
.
.
other.
Let us proceed by degrees first, prac impose upon our selves the sacrifices necessary to avoid faults and sins second, impose upon ourselves the 3d.
tise
:
the mortifications and
s
;
sacrifices indispensable to the
proper fulfilment impose upon ourselves those required by circumstances, in order to properly endure trials and crosses. 4th. It is profitable also to impress upon our minds the maxims of the saints concerning of
our duties
all
;
third,
namely Conquer thyself. Be mas of thy heart. Noi what is pleasing, but what The greater violence t/wu offerest to tJiyright.
mortification
:
ter is
self, i.
the greater progress t/wu wilt
25).
make
(Imit.,
CHAPTER
LIV.
TEMPERANCE. Carissimi, sobrii estate et vigilate (Be sober
PET.
and watch).
I
v. 8.
EMPERANCE, nal virtues,
is
the fourth of the cardi that noble and beautiful
virtue which subjects to the empire of
reason the appetites of our concupiscence, par ticularly in the matter of food and drink. This virtue is earnestly recommended to us
by the Holy Spirit tures
;
therefore
in many we should
ourselves to practise tise
it
To
it
parts of the Scrip love it and apply
constantly and to prac
in its perfection. this end let us consider its
necessity and
the value of tem
its
practice. perance, I. Value. Temperance is a precious virtue in the eyes of God, and it procures man inesti
mable blessings for soul and body. If we wish to see the value God attaches to temperance we have only to open the Holy
From the very beginning, when Scriptures. He willed to exercise the obedience of our first
parents,
He
gave them a command enjoin352
TEMPERANCE. ing temperance
and evil, He ii.
17).
He
:
Of the
tree
353
of knowledge of good
said to them, thou shaft not eat (Gen. said to the mother of Samson, by
Beware and drink no the ministry of an angel wine nor strong drink, because thou shalt conceive :
and bear a
son
who
shall be consecrated to
God
Later the archangel Ga 4, 5). (Judges The son that shall be born said briel to Zachary xiii.
:
to thee shall be great before the Lord, and shall drink no wine nor strong drink ; and he shall be
with the Holy Ghost (Luke i. 15). public life by fast and abstinence, and He resisted the spirit of gluttony with these great words Not in bread filled
The Saviour began His
:
alone doth
man
ceedeth from the
live,
but in every
word
mouth of God (Matt.
that pro-
iv. 4).
Woe
you, He says later, who are filled, and who refuse nothing to your appetites; for you shall
to
hunger (Luke vi. 25) and thirst in eternal tor ments, where you will ask in vain for a drop of water to cool your tongue. Take heed to your selves, He adds, lest perhaps } our hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness and the cares of this life ; and that day (the day of judg ment) come upon you suddenly (Luke xxi. 34).
Temperance is a principle of corporal wellIt is the greatest safeguard of health, being. and maintains the body, the soul s instrument, in a perfect state, all its
functions.
ready and disposed to Sober drinking
is
fulfil
health to soul
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
354
and body (Ecclus.
xxxi. 37).
have perished ; but he that long life (Ecclus. xxx vii. excess raisetJi quarrels, (Ecclus. xxxi. 38). is
Temperance It
tages.
is
By surfeiting many temperate shall pro Wine drunken with
34).
and
wratli,
and many
ruins
a source of spiritual advan from the sad effects of in
frees us
temperance,
.
.
.
of which the Israelites in the
The people, desert offer us a striking example. sat doivn to eat and drink, says the Scripture,
and they rose up to play, to dance before the golden calf which they had made their god (Exod. xxxii. 6). It preserves the soul in a happy state of spi ritual
health,
which
consists
in
sanctifying grace, the passions, in the vigor of the faculties of the mind, of the understanding, of the will, in the in
fervor, in
empire over the senses and
to easily apply ourselves to things above. Corporal fast, the Church tells us, represses the
power
of vice, raises tlie mind us with virtues and rewards.
sallies
II.
to Jicaven, enriches
Necessity of temperance.
Temperance
Be not necessary, to preserve chastity. drunk with wine, which contains luxury (Eph. The lily of purity only flourishes v. 1 8). is
among
thorns, nor
that
live
this
was
of bread, xvi. 49).
is it
found
in delights (Job the iniquity of
in the
xxviii.
land of them Behold 13).
Sodom pride, fulness and abundance, and idleness (Ezech.
TEMPERANCE. Temperance passions.
He
is
355
necessary to overcome
our
that nourishetli Jus servant delicate
his cJiildliood, afterwards shall find him Bridle gluttony, says stubborn (Prov. xxix. 21). the author of the Imitation, and thou shalt the
from
ly
easier restrain all carnal inclinations (b.
Temperance
is
i.
19).
we must mind weighed down by sen
necessary because
pray well, and the suality cannot rise to heavenly things nor give itself to prayer: The sensual man perceiveth not these tilings that are of the Spirit of God (i Cor. ii. He, on the contrary, who makes a sober 14). use of corporal things acquires that serenity, that purity of heart, to which is promised the sight of God and blessings from above. .
III. its
To
.
.
temperance we must know
practise rules and maxims. 9
The
is contented with what is and does not seek what is superflu necessary ous. Having food and wherewith to be covered, ist.
Christian
says
the apostle, with these
Tim.
vi. 8).
2d.
Food was created
and not is
content (i
renew our strength,
to satisfy sensuality.
The body is made to obey
3d. it
to
we are
ment of all
its
the instrument of the soul
;
the soul in the accomplish duties we must nourish it sober ;
preserve its promptness and its pliability without surfeiting and enervating it. must use food prudently, as a medi4th.
ly to
We
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
356 cal
to preserve life and renew our Thou hast taught me, Lord, says St.
remedy
strength.
Augustine,
take
to
my
corporal
nourishment as
necessary medicine.
We
must prescribe for ourselves a rule regulated by reason, and beware of giving rein to our natural appetite by permitting it to 5th.
fully satisfy itself. 6th. The true measure of
temperance
is
not
nor the quantity of mental blind appetite but real needs of nature attest the labor, .
.
.
.
.
.
ed by wise experience. 7th. Nature, say the wise, is contented ^vith lutl : thus very little oil is needed to feed a lamp, to facilitate the movement of a wheel. /;/
doubt
let
What we
there
be
rather
less
tlian
more.
more good than what we take in delicacies. Wisdom dwells insobriety. It. is by employing these means that all the leave does us
saints learned to practise the precious virtue of temperance we have but to employ them in ;
our turn to succeed sult will
we
shrill
be
all
the
like
This happy re easily obtained that
them.
more
be seconded by the powerful interces
sion of the Blessed Virgin, our Mother.
c
CHAPTER
LV.
CHASTITY.
O quam pulchra beautiful
is
est casta generatio cum claritate ! (Oh the chaste generation with Wis. iv. glory).
HE
most
how
most amiable of
the
characteristic virtue of Children of Mary and the most
virtues,
the
beautiful, the
!
I.
brilliant pearl
on their brow,
is
the virtue of
chastity.
May we
love this virtue as the Blessed Vir
gin, our Mother, loves it serve it in all its splendor
May we
!
!
To
this
ever pre end let us
the excellence of chastity, then safeguard. I. Excellence. The excellence of chastity consists in the of the virtue ravishing consider,
what
first,
is its
beauty and the inestimable advantages it procures. ist. The Holy Spirit Himself extols chastity in the most exalted terms How beautiful is the :
chaste generation
with glory: for the memory is immortal : because it is known both wi h thereof God and with wen (Wis. iv. l).
The Son of God marie man has manifested a marked predilection for this virtue, not only 357
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
35 8
He
cho;>se for His Mother the purest of He but desired that all who were to virgins, touch His humanity, or draw near to His sacred person should be pure and virginal. His foster-father, His precursor, His beloved disciple, the priesthood of the new law which He instituted to offer His eucharistic body, all appear before us resplendent in virginal purity. He feedetli among the lilies, says the prophet He is that Lamb without stain (Cant. vi. 2). which St. John beheld on Mount Sion With him there were an hundred and forty-four thou and they sung a canticle before the sand,
did
:
.
.
mw
.
man
could say the canticle but those, for ; are These follow the Lamb whither they virgins. soever he gocth (Apoc. xiv. 1-4). throne
no
This beautiful virtue, then, has a charm which enraptures the heart of God. 3d. Chastity elevates the soul to an incom parable dignity it makes it the spouse of God. Ah how joyous will be the nuptials of a soul with such a Spouse. 4th. Chastity elevates man above his nature and makes him like the angels of God (Matt. :
!
xxi
:
.
30).
The
angels, like chaste souls, see
God
burn with and the things of heaven flames of thev accomplish with pure charity; undeterred by any obstacle, all the promptness, of will God. St. Bernard goes so far as to place a chaste ;
.
.
.
the}?"
CHASTITY.
man above
359
the angels, because of the courage to attain a viitue which the
he must exert
The latter, he says, angels possess by nature. are more fortunate in having received a perfect purity a chaste man has more merit in having sustained the greatest combats. 5th. Chastity makes us fruitful in virtues and ;
good works; ... souls to God. .
.
it
powerfully helps us to win
.
Safeguard of chastity.
To
preserve in tact the virtue of chastity and bring it to its highest perfection we must, ist, be penetrated with the frailty of man, particularly in this re II.
more than any other / am man, and tliere is no say human misery into which I may not fall. Were you purer than an angel you are always cjfithed in corruptible flesh, and a simple impru dence may suffice to plunge you into the mire. 2d. We must love chastity, love it as the most precious of treasures, and add to this love a horror of the contrary sin, and even a spect.
that
It is in
we must
horror of
all
Impurity people call
this sense :
that could lead to impurity. a vice which the tongues of
is
all
infamous--a dishonorable, debas ing vice which degrades man and drags him lower than the brute; a vice which leads its slaves into sacrileges and innumerable sins; a vice of which it is extremely difficult to amend a vice which induces blindness, hardness, de;
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
360
and which ruins the greatest number of
spair, souls.
of
.
.
.
DC es this suffice to give us a horror
it ?
We
must
dangerous occasions dis solute companions, licentious reading, immoral 3d.
fly
familiarity with these are the most persons of another sex usual shoals upon which chastity is wreck
plays, idleness, intemperance, ;
ed.
.
.
.
We
4th.
must employ the means
summed up
humility, mortification, prayer. correspond to the triple symbol
These means lily which we
find in different parts of
of the
the Scriptures
:
the
lily
among thorns, and the fields,
where
they are
;
in
it
is
of the valley, the lily lily in the midst of the
inundated with the dew of
heaven--an image of grace, which prayers cause to descend in abundance from heaven. Under the name of prayer we must under stand not only assiduous prayer and pious in but also vocations at the time of danger, .
.
.
frequenting the sacraments, as well as a ten der devotion to the Blessed Virgin and St. Jo seph.
.
.
.
By employing
these means, after the example
good Christians, we shall the inestimable treasure of preserve, like them, of the saints
rmd
purity, and
we
all
shall
go through
keeping our souls unspotted from tion.
this its
world
corrup
CHAPTER
LVI.
PURITY OF INTENTION.
(If
St ocuhts tuus fuerit simplex, totum corpus tuiim htcidiini erit thy eye be single, thy whole body shall be lightsome).
MATT.
vi. 22.
HE
eye of the soul, of which the Saviour here speaks, is the intention with
which we act, the end we have in view, the motive of our actions. This motive is justly called the eye of the soul, since it is a torch which enlightens and guides the soul. If thy eye be single, if thy intention be pure and upright, with no other object but God and His whole body will be HgJitsome, all thy conduct, thy actions will be holy and share in the true light, which is God. will, thy
all
This sentence alone of Jesus Christ to
make
us
with
always
act
what
purity of intention, and
is
quired
s suffices
comprehend how important purity of intention.
how
is
it is
to
Now, it
ac
?
What
purity of intention? The inten it is not mingled with or in fected with views of self-love. This is the case I.
tion
is
is
pure when
361
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
362
when we look only
at
God, when we make
His divine will our sole object and do not fall back upon our own interests. This purity has degrees when it is directed towards heaven, like a flame without smoke, it is confounded ;
with
pure chanty, disinterested love. Alas! degree of perfection is too rarely encoun
this
For, as the apostle says, all seek t/ie things that are their own, not tlie tilings that are Jesus Chris fs (Phil. ii. 21). tered.
2d. Purity of intention supposes uprightness and simplicity. The intention is upright when we proceed frankly, without seeking to deceive ourselves when we act in good faith, doing all that we can to know and follow the truth. ;
Simplicity of intention excludes all multipli city it does not give itself to several objects, ;
but to one, which is God and even in God it considers but His glory, His good pleasure, ;
Not that a the accomplishment of His will. man actuated by this simplicity of purpose does not desire also certain created things, such as health, the necessities of
life, success in busi but he desires them in a manner secon dary and subordinate to the will of God, which is the principal term, the absolute end of his life. 3d. This perfect purity of intention gives great value to our works. The least action done purely for God is of more value than the
ness
most
;
diffijult
labor,
however important
in ap-
PURITY OF INTENTION. pearance,
there be in
if
it
363
the least mixture of
self-interest.
A
man actuated by this upright inten 4th. tion always enjoys the testimony of a good conscience, and that serenity, that interior peace, which all the riches of the world cannot And since he lives for God alone, God, give.
His turn, overwhelms him with
in
precious favors.
His most
.
.
Such
is the nature, such is the price of purBut what must we do to of intention.
itv U
acquire
We
ist. life
it ?
How
II.
to
to acquire purity of intention. must, once for all, offer our whole
God.
but one
life
If ;
seriously reflect that
I
that
I
can live this
life
I
have
but once,
I can never recommence it; that, having but one life, 1 consequently cannot let it be bar ren, but must make it bring forth fruit, to which
that
1
must give
all
its
value, that later
I
cult)
for all eternity- -then I have in comprehending that to make
most
beautiful,
sible,
1
joice in
it
may no
my
re
diffi life
most noble, as perfect as pos must offer it entirely to God and His This holy offering consists
service
ourselves in
God
s
hands, that
in
placing
He may govern
us according to His will in all things, saying with St. Paul: Lord, what wilt tJiou that I
do?
.
2d.
.
.
To watch over
the nffections of our heart,
364
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
the desires and passions, which are sometimes That seems hidden and rule us unconsciously. often to be charity, says the author of the Imita tion, which is rather natural affection ; because our
own natural tion, desire
inclination, self-will, hope
of our own
of retribu
interest will be seldom
want
ing (Imit.\. 15). According as we perceive in our intention something human, selfseeking,
we have
only to disavow it and reject it. 3d. Every time we encounter a trial to be endured, a disagreeable duty to be fulfilled, an .
occasion, a
word ungratifying
must accept
to self-love,
.
.
we
work, whatever it may be, all the more willingly that it is an ac tion wholly pure in the eyes of God, without any mixture of self-love. 4th. To frequently renew our good intention, saying, for example: All for Jesus! For 1 hee For the greater glory of God ! al ne, O my God ! It is not necessary, however, that we have for each one of our actions an explicit and marked intention, nor to s:iy, I am doin^f this for such j a motive it suffices to offer in the morning the this trial, this
>>
;
whole day to His holy will
God by
a general resolution to do
in all things.
for us if we succeed in having this and pure upright intention, this simple view of God in all our actions! Then our life shall be wholly a life of grace and light totum corpus,
Happy
lucidum
erit.
CHAPTER
LVIT.
CONFORMITY TO THE WILL OF GOD. In capite libri scriptum est de me tem tuam (In the head of the book should do thy
will,
HE
O God
:
HEB.
!)
Ut faciam, Deus, voluntawritten of me That I
it is
:
x. 7.
holy will of God, the constant divine will, or, as
filment of this
are accustomed to callto the will of
say
is
the
God,
summary
it,
of
all
we
conformity
a virtue which
is
ful
we may
virtues, the abridg
In fact, what does God sanctity. wish but the sanctification of His creatures? And is it not the most sublime sanctity for which the Saviour causes us to ask in these beautiful words of the Our Father Thy will
ment of
all
:
be done on earth as
Then
it
is
in
heaven ?
us endeavor to acquire an ever-in creasing conformity to the divine will; and to better succeed therein let us consider the na ture, the excellence, the practice of this vir let
tue. I.
Nature.
What
is
conformity to the divine
will? 3-5
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
366 ist.
It is a
virtue which consists, as the
name
indicates, in discerning the will of God in all things, and in adopting this holy will in a man
ner to make it our own. Hence results a per so fect accord between God and the creature that the mark by which we may recognize whe ther we possess the virtue of which we speak ;
is
to
wilt or not to will
not wish wills
what God
will all that
to
He
wislics or docs
wills
and as He
it.
2d. After
what we have
to the will of
God
just said conformity
includes at the same time an
act of the intelligence and an act of the will: the intelligence recognizes the divine will, the will loves and accepts it. This knowledge and this love of the divine
imply a double principle, a double which reason and faith reveal to us.
will
truth,
All that happens to us in this world hap pens by the will of God, in this sense that God Evil itself at least permits it and tolerates it. ist.
:
and
sin
would not
exist
if
God.
in
His impene
Before trable designs, did not permit them. asks what of us, to God we have see we act either to prevent an evil or bring about success but once the event is accomplished we must ;
consider the material fact as the expression of
which we must unite ours. we assume is that God, being the best of fathers, wills only our
the divine
will, to
The second
truth which
CONFORMITY TO THE WILL OF
GOD.
367
good, and that in all that He permits regard ing us He has only our salvation in view. I can, then, and I should, on my part make every thing that happens to me here below tend to salvation, according to the words of the To them that love God all tilings work apostle
my
:
together unto good
(Rom.
viii. 28).
3d. The matter, the subject, of our conformi ty to the will of God is threefold- -sin, duty,
We
suffering.
must
fly all
that
God
forbids,
He
ordains, accept the trials accomplish He imposes upon us, the tribulations which we encounter by permission of His ever-adorable
that
all
providence. It is
that
it
.
.
.
easy to see that this is a vast subject, extends to all our life, and that every
moment we must will of
God--a
conformity to the great. advantage, if we consider practise
the excellence of this virtue. Excellence. Nothing is more more holy than to conform our things to that of the Lord our God. II.
just,
wise,
ist.
Is
He
not the supreme Master Is he not the supreme
more
will in all
whom
all
Monarch of the universe, who bears upon His brow an eternal diadem ? Then must we not in all that He wills, in every event, bow before Him, saymust obey?
in o of
:
Lord : let Him do what is o good in Kings iii. 18). Is He not also an just Judge, who must punish sin and
It is the
His sight infinitely
f
(i
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
368
make
our iniquities? ... At the His justice He does time, not cease to be a father. Suck as / love He says, I chastise (Apoc. iii. 19). 2d. The will of God, ever directed by His supreme wisdom, is a most sure rule of right; us expiate
same
in exercising
y
then
is
God
is
it not the highest wisdom to follow it? a Father as infinitely wise as He is in
good
finitely
what
He knows
;
suitable for us,
is
our wants, He knows what would be advan
tageous or injurious- -health, success, or humilia tion and even though His dispositions seem to us an evil, we are certain that He disposes all things with power, sweetness, and love, for our ;
true good.
Would we have peace and happiness? secret
is
What
God. of
all
contained is
in
The
conformity to the will of
the cause of
all
our
the troubles which disturb us?
trials
and
It is
that
things go contrary to our desires and to our will. Now, if our will be united to that of God there is nothing to contradict it; it is al
ways
it always has what it desires. could it desire better than the will Here, then, we discover true
satisfied,
And what of God ?
.
.
.
happiness, true peace- -in conformity to the will of God! It is, moreover, the verification of
those
words:
Peace on
eartli
to
wen of good
will.
This
is
not to say that the crosses and bitter-
CONFORMITY TO THE WILL OF GOD ness of this
life
are in nowise
felt,
369
but the bitter
which do
ness, the crosses, the trials are clouds
not reach the summit of the holy mountain, darkness which cannot penetrate into the inti mate sanctuary of the soul inseparably united to the divine will.
Have you a cross ? asks St. Francis of Make your will one with that of God Sales. and the cross will disappear. Does something displease you ? Look at it as the will of God and He who it will appear agreeable to you. .
.
.
wishes but the good pleasure of God is always content and tranquil, like a statue in its niche. If a statue could speak it would say that it in nowise washed to be anywhere but in the niche where its master had placed it, and w here he r
was pleased
to see
it.
3d. Is there anything more holy than the divine will ? Ever tending essentially to the
purest glory of God, this adorable will is the rule of all perfection, of all sanctity, of every well-
regulated will. Man s will, then, shall be holy, shall be perfect, in proportion as it is in accord with that of God. On the other hand, nothing so holy and meritorious as the homage we render God by submitting our will to His; it is the sacrifice of that which is dearest to us, our liberty, which we place in the hands of Him who gave it to us--a sacrifice so precious in His is
eyes that
He
prefers
it
to
all
holocausts, as
He
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
370 testifies
by saying
:
Pr(zbe,filinii, cor
tuum mihi
me thy heart (Prov. xxiii. 26). Does not man s supreme perfection consist in being what God wishes him- -being a man ac
My
son, give
cording to His heart? / have found, He says, speaking of David, a man according to my own heart, ivho shall do all my wills (Acts xiii. 22). not the summit of perfection to do God s on earth, as the angels do it in heaven, as we daily ask in these words: Thy will be dune on Is it
will
earth, as
it is
heaven ?
in
moreover, what the example of Jesus Christ and all the saints shows us? / came down from heaven, says the Saviour, not to Is
do
it
not,
my own
will, but the will
of
Him
that sent
me
The
(John holy martyrs Epictetus and Astius in the midst of their torments unceas ingly cried We are Christians. Lord Jesus, may Thy will be done in us ! This cry represents the vi. 38).
:
sentiments of
all
the saints.
It is not difficult to conform our will to that of God when we have the eyes of our faith well open to see under all that hap pens, under all crosses, under all veils, the will of our heavenly Father It was thus that the Saviour saw the hand of His Father presenting Him the chalice of His Passion, though this Passion was the work of Judas and the Jews: The clialice which my Father hath given me, shall
III.
Practice.
I not drink
it?
He
said to Peter.
CONFORMITY TO THE WILL OF
GOD.
37*
i
receive from the hand of God be often say I comes sweet and agreeable. would willingly submit, if my cross were not
we
All that
We
my own
the result of
:
fault or of the malice of
Have more came from God. that it from God, will see comes and faith, you that it is always God who imposes it upon you, since He permits it to reach you since, with out Willing the sin you have committed or the injustice ol which you are the victim, He wills men, or
if it
.
.
.
the suffering which results from it. 2d. must exercise ourselves in this holy ist. In ordinary and daily events. conformity 2d. In the labors and functions to be ful
We
:
.
.
.
filled.
less
.
.
3d.
.
more or
In accepting the gifts,
advantageous, which we have received from 4th. In sorrow and sickness.
nature.
.
.
.
.
5th. In temptations and aridities. the success or sterility of our labors. .
.
.
.
.
6th. .
.
.
In
7th.
In spiritual things themselves, and our greater
or less progress in virtue. must exercise ourselves by degrees 3d. .
.
.
We
if necessary, our rebellious will by then accustom it to submit promptly and finally, unite it to the divine will so willingly
first
force
subject, ;
;
may
it
closely with the 4th.
to
be lost therein and confounded
good pleasure of God. must frequently ask of God the grace .
.
.
We
know and
perfectly accomplish His holy will.
St. Ignatius habitually
terminated his letters in
37 2
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
these words I pray God that He grant you to ever know and perfectly accomplish His holy ivilL St. Ignatius said also: Govern me, Lord ; dispose of me according to Thy designs and Tliy will ; for I know that Thou always treatest me with love. :
The Holy Spirit Himself teaches us to say Lord, ^vhat wilt Thou that I do ? My heart :
.
is
ready, Lord,
my
be done on earth as
heart it is
is
ready
/
in lieaven I
.
.
.
.
.
Thy will
CHAPTER
LVIII.
PRUDENCE. Estote prudentes sicut serpentes (Be ye wise as serpents).
MATT.
x. 16.
RUDENCE
occupies among the virtues a superior rank it is the first of the four cardinal virtues, to which all the ;
Thus we see it shining with particular splendor on the brow of the Blessed Virgin, whom the Church salutes with
others are attached.
Virgin most prudent- -Virgo prudentissima. We need not be astonished, then, that the divine Master recommends prudence the
title of
particularly to His to us all, saying
so
them
:
apostles,
and through
Be ye wise
as serpents.
In the parable of the ten virgins He even goes so far as to show us that without true prudence we do not enter heaven. .
.
.
What, then, must we understand by the vir tue of prudence? And how should we prac tise I.
it ?
Prudence.
Prudence, justly called the 373
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
374
moderator or guide auriga of virtues, is a moral virtut which directs man and leads him to act suitably in all the affairs of life. The vene rable
Abbe Hamon
explains
it
better when, af
ter the opinion of St. Francis of Sales, he de fines prudence a virtue whicJi teaches us to think,
do what is necessary at the time and in manner required. There is a false prudence which we must not confound with the virtue of which we are speak ing. The false prudence, which the Holy Spirit calls the wisdom of the children of this world, the wisdom of t lie flesh, which is an enemy to God (Luke to say, to
the
xvi. 8
;
Rom.
viii. 6),
consists in a certain skill
which may be called the art of succeeding in temporal affairs. Its only object is the goods of this present life, riches, and human gran deur, which it strives to attain by all means, honest or dishonest, provided they be
effica
cious and sufficiently lawful in appearance not to outrage public opinion. These means, be sides dissimulation, deceit, and the intrigues of politics, are calumny, defamation of rivals, hy
pocrisy, bribery, corruption, sometimes vio lence and intimidation, always great energy,
indefatigable
labor
to
attain
the end.
It is
prudence which the Saviour depicts in the parable of the unjust steward, which He this
concludes by saying that the children of i^ji
this
Id are wiser in their generation than the chil-
PRUDEN
375
.
To this false pru dren of light (Luke xvi. 8). dence which gives death is opposed true pru dence, the wisdom of t/ie spirit, which is life and The ivisdom of the flesli is death ; but the peace. and peace (Rom. viii. Its object is not the false riches which death 6). takes away, but those which are immortal and truly worthy of man, because man was made to possess them these riches are virtue and heav Prudence has them ever in view enly glory. in the general conduct of life and in all particu ivisdom of the spirit
is
life
;
lar affairs.
The general conduct of life is its direction towards the end of human existence namely, eternal salvation, the acquisition of which consti tutes the great affair of
man
prudence requires before affair
be made sure.
.
.
True
things that this
all
that
.
Particular affairs include
accomplish
here below.
all
in the spiritual or
we have
to
temporal order
:
Christian duties, the duties of our state, studies, vocation, commercial affairs, business enter prises,
social
amusement
;
a journey, a party of these things come within the
plans,
all
province of prudence,
which imprints upon
them
that seal of fitness and perfection neces to the best success. sary In saying that prudence guides man in the fulfilment of the duties of his state
no social position.
Human
we exclude
society
is
divided
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
37 6
into t\vo parts, one of which is dependent on the other one is superior and the other in ferior one commands, and the other obeys and ;
;
executes what
is
dence to
their respective
virtue
is
command
fulfil
commanded.
All
need pru but this
roles,
particularly necessary for those who it then takes the name of governing ;
because it pmdentia gubernatrix stands in a measure at the helm of the social
prudence-
directs
ship,
its
course,
and
saves
it
from
wreck.
Prudence extends, then, to all the actions of and is everywhere necessary to us. It is prudence which saves us from dangers of soul and body, which helps us to extricate ourselves from peril it is prudence which wisely en lightens us in the management of affairs and life
;
guides us to success. Happy, then, as the Holy Spirit says, is the man that findeth wisdom and is rich in prudence ! The purchasing thereof is better than the merchan dise of silver, and her fruit than the chiefest and purest gold. She is more precious than all riches ;
and
all the things that are desired are not to be
compared with
hand and y
her.
in her left
Length of days
hand
riches
is in
her right
and glory.
Her
ways are beautiful ways, and all her paths are She is a tree of life to them tJiat lay peaceable. hold on her ; and lie that shall retain her is blessed. The Lord by wisdom hath founded the earth, hath
PRUDENCE. established
the
377
heavens by prudence (Prov.
iii.
I3-I9)-
But how acquire, how practise dence
this
pru
?
To acquire this precious virtue not content ourselves with the lessons of experience, which are too slowly and too dearly learned, but, after the example of Solo II.
Practice.
we must
mon, ask it of God: I wished, and understanding was given me ; and I called upon God, and the spi rit of wisdom came upon me (Wis. vii. 7).If any of you want wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men abundantly (James i. 5). To prayer we must add personal co-opera tion, and endeavor to know the qualities of Christian prudence, to follow its principles and rules, and to avoid the contrary fault of impru dence.
The
qualities of Christian
prudence are indi cated in these words of our Saviour Be ye wise as serpents and simple as doves. This means that our prudence must be adroit and at the same time simple that, on the one hand, we must imitate the serpent by employing every means and by making every sacrifice, and on the other the dove by doing nothing to wound faith or conscience and never consenting to any sacri In fact, the dove is dis fice in this respect. tinguished by the purity of its glance, and the serpent for the skill with which it insinuates :
;
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL. everywhere, and, as St. Jerome says, for the admirable instinct with which he protects his head by covering it with the rest of his
itself
body, exposing his body to his
head and
his
all
the blows to save
life.
The prudent ones of the world also imitate the serpent, but the serpent of Eve and the fiery true serpents of the desert which give death ;
prudence imitates the brazen serpent which gives
life.
.
.
.
The
principles of prudence and are as follows
its
chief rules
:
In
all
things consider the end and take fitting
and proper means to
attain
it.
The fear Never lose sight of God s law the is the wisdom Lord of (Ps. beginning of :
ex.
10).
Be ever
obedient.
An
speak of victory (Prov. xxi.
Be humble and
distrust
obedient
man
shall
28).
your own views
;
ask
counsel and yield willingly to the advice of. It is most imprudent to heed but another.
one
s self.
Avoid
self-will
and obstinacy; avoid equally
that weakness which adopts all counsels and yields to the desires of counsellors rather than to their reasons.
Avoid believing too readily what you hear, and condemn no one unheard. Avoid speaking or acting without full know-
PRUDENCE.
379
ledge of a subject and without sufficient reflec tion.
Avoid
indecision, slowness, as
cipitation.
.
.
much
as pre
.
Act with an upright
intention, never permit
ting yourself to be influenced
by prejudice,
fear,
interest, or any ill regulated feeling. Refrain from speaking or acting under the
influence of any passion, whether pride, love, hatred, or anger.
Be
discreet, say
Distrust
all
little,
but
listen
much.
innovations.
According to the doctrine of St. Ignatius, em ploy every human means as if success depend ed wholly upon them, and at the same time place all your confidence in God as if all de
pended on God
alone.
Before under ^Imitate St. Francis of Sales. a work of zeal this taking holy bishop, a model of prudence, consulted and reflected for some but when he recognized that the work was according to the designs of God he boldly began it and pursued it, permitting no obstacle
time
;
to deter him.
Avoid all negligence Take ye and pray (Mark xiii. 33). Approach :
be enlightened (Ps. xxxiii. 6). Principal faults which prudence
heed, watch the Lord and
condemns
:
Exposing ourselves to be eternally lost by living a life of indifference to religion, arguing:
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
380
Perhaps
I
teaches, but
do
;
I
may 1
fall
into eternal
do not care
shall take the risk.
Living of dying
in
;
.
.
mortal sin and
in that state.
.
.
I
shall
as faith
fire,
do
as others
.
in continual
danger
.
Exposing ourselves to lose the treasure of by reading evil publications or by listening
faith
to impious discourses. Approaching shoals
... where virtue
is wrecked, and which we call occasions of mortal sin. He that level k danger, says the Holy Spirit, shall
perish in
it
(Ecclus. iii. 27). Neglecting to secure our salvation and defer
ring from day to day our return to God. Delay not to be converted to the Lord, and defer it not
from day Living
to
day (Ecclus.
v. 8).
in forgetfulness of death.
.
.
.
In sickness neglecting to summon a priest in time, and incurring for ourselves or our rela tives the risk of dying without the sacra
ments.
Such are the faults, or rather the misfortunes, which prudence causes us to avoid, while, on the other hand, it leads man by the easiest
way to the gate of eternal salvation. Then let us endeavor to practise this precious virtue after the example of the Virgin most prudent, who is our Mother, and who by her intercession will help us to acquire this treasure.
CHAPTER
LIX.
RECOLLECTION. Jesus declinavit a turba
.
.
et
.
dimissa
turba ascendit in
montem solus orare (Jesus went aside from the multitude and went up into the mountain to pray). JOHN v. 13 .
.
.
MATT.
;
xiv. 23.
ECOLLECTION,
modesty, solitude,
si
lence, the presence of God, are things intimately linked one with another,
and which have much
among them 1
affinity
without, however, being confounded. Recollection is the end modesty, solitude, si
selves,
;
remembrance of the presence of God are the means for these four virtues sustain
lence, the
;
one another and mutually concur to establish in the soul the holy disposition which we call recollection.
Recollection
is
the state of a soul which
is
and habitually applies them to the things of God. This state is op posed to dissipation. When it is habitual it constitutes a virtue which we call a spirit of re mistress of
its
faculties
collection. It is
one of the virtues most necessary to lead
SODALITY DIREC10FS MANUAL.
382 a holy
a precious virtue which and practise with cherish earnestly
and perfect
we should
life
ardor. I.
Love
of recollection.
collection because of
vantages. Recollection interior
life
is
its
We
should love re necessity and its ad
a necessary condition of the
and
spiritual progress. aspire to the interior life? Apply yourself to recollection it is the gate through which you shall enter this desirable life. You
Do you
;
are aware that the spiritual or interior life is the life of the soul with God in the world of This world is in the depth of our souls, faith. in
our innermost heart:
Z,0,
tke
kingdom of God
within you (Luke xvii. 21). It is there that the Creator is seated on a throne of mercy is
awaiting His creature, to instruct him, to hear him, to govern him, to enrich him. ... It is there that the soul in her turn finds a dwelling, life wholly different and much of the exterior world she lives that than better there with her heavenly Father, her God, and her all. Now, the entrance to this life is recollection we must recollect ourselves and withdraw into the secret recesses of our hearts to find our Father Enter into thy chamber, says the Saviour, and) having sJiut the door pray to thy Father in
communion, and
;
;
:
y
secret (Matt. vi. 6).
RECOLLECTION.
Have you tue ? Keep to advance.
serve and
at heart
383
your advancement
yourself recollected it To advance in virtue ;
is
in vir
the
way
to pre increase the graces of God, to de is
velop the precious seed which He sows in our souls at times of mercy for example, during prayer, while in retreat, or when receiving the ;
sacraments.
.
.
.
This seed we must preserve and fructify in recollection, otherwise the birds of the air will bear
it
away.
.
.
.
A
soul without recollection, a soul given to exterior dissipation, allows its good thoughts
and holy affections to escape and finds itself invaded by tilings from without. It resembles an uncovered vessel, a house with an ever open door, a public way which men and animals tra verse at
grow,
will.
creased.
It is
not there that good plants are preserved and in
treasures
that
...
that many remain long years with Why out making any progress in virtue ? It is very frequently because they are wanting in recol You have solved much, says the Pro lection and he phet Aggeus, and brought in little, tJiat hath earned wages put them into a bag with is it
:
.
holes
(Agg.
II.
of of
its its
i.
.
.
6).
Then we must love necessity; we must precious advantages.
recollection because also love
it
because
SODALITY DIREC7VPS MANUAL.
384
The advantages which as
its
fruits,
proper
crease of
all
recollection procures
are peace, prayer, an in
virtues.
The visible world is an unceasing Peace. turmoil to find calm and peace we must with ;
draw from
Then we
it.
God
our Lord, the peace (Ps. Ixxv. It Prayer. we hear God
that It
:
3).
is in
the calm of recollection that
we see His light, and His sweetness. His gifts prayer, that sweet converse with God,
we
is
find peace, and with it of peace His place is in
s
voice, that
relish
.
.
.
which causes us to find, as the apostle says, heaven upon earth: Our conversation is m heaven we already live in heaven (Phil. iii. 20).
An
increase of
all
virtues.
This peace and
this light of God is the atmosphere suitable to all virtues. ... In it they germinate and de
velop like germs in spring, like flowers in the heat of a conservatory shut out from the winter storms.
.
.
.
Such are the advantages of recollection. Then we must love it and earnestly practise it. To practise recollection well two things are needed we must remove obstacles and :
employ the necessary means, each one accord ing to his state and his condition. All that induces and promotes dissipation is an obstacle to recollection.
A
dissipated
mind
RECOLLECTION.
385
a father of a family who is always absent thus affords his servants fatal liberty.
is like
and That which keeps the mind abroad and pre vents it from recollecting itself is, ist, curiosity to see and hear everything, as well as immode rate liberty accorded to all the senses 2d, too frequent excursions and visits 3d, use less conversations and recreations; 4th, human friendships and too tender attachments which bind the heart; 5th, excessive occupation and ;
.
.
.
.
.
.
;
Do
over- eager ness. to affairs,
.
.
.
The means
not give, only lend yourself
says St.
Bernard.
of recollection
which keep the
heart closed to earth and open to heaven are, 2d, ist, modesty and guard of the senses; guard of the imagination and the heart .
.
.
;
3d, solitude;
our words
.
4th, silence
.
.
.
.
;
.
5th, the
.
and reserve
.
.
in
remembrance of the
presence of God. Here," says St. Theresa to her daughters of Carmel, is the way to acquire a habit of recollection Represent to yourself within you .
.
.
"
"
:
a palace of surpassing splendor, all of gold and precious stones- -in a word, fitting for the great
Monarch who abides there and that you con cur in part, which is true, to give it this beauty. This palace is your soul when she is pure the ;
;
beauty of the most superb edifice fades before hers virtues are the diamonds which form her ;
adornment, and the
greater the virtues the
SODALITY DIRECTOR
386
S
MANUAL.
more resplendent the diamonds. Finally, ima gine that the King of kings is in this palace, that in His infinite goodness He wishes to be your Father, that He is seated on a throne of priceless value, and that this throne is your heart.
"*
How tion
must we use these means of recollec
?
How
must we keep
when we
ourselves
recollected
are obliged to occupy ourselves with
exterior things? Exterior employments
which
we
fulfil
as
duties of our state and to obey God s will do not prevent true recollection, provided we are faithful to three things
:
ist,
to form a pious in
2d, not to yield to over-eagerness; 3d, to give as much time to prayer as we can. Then we shall be like the sanctuary lamp sus
tention
;
which may be moved but when permitted to resume its equilibrium returns to its place be It is thus fore the altar as its centre of rest.
pended before the
altar,
to the right or the
left,
that the soul, in spite of its exterior occupations, have a spirit of recollection, ever returns
if it
to the feet of
We
God
as
its
centre of
rest.
midst of even the most distracting affairs, preserve our heart recollect ed after the example of our Saviour in the
may,
then, in the
*
The
Way of
Perfection.
RECOLLECTION.
387
He fulfilled His minis life. the with intention as the purest try work of His Father, and when He could He withdrew from the multitude and gave Him He went aside from the multi self to prayer. the tude, says Gospel, and went into the mountain alone to pray. And the Blessed Virgin- -in what fervent recollection did she not fulfil all the duties of her state in the holy household of Nazareth Let us study this example of our august Mother, and let us ask her assistance labors of His public
among men
!
.
.
to imitate her.
.
CHAPTER
LX. {
SANCTIFICATION OF ONE
S
Umisquisque propiium donum habet ex Deo
STATE. :
alius quidem
alius vero sic (Every one hath his proper gift from God after this manner, and another after that).! COR. vii. 7.
F
:
sic,
one
were given me to penetrate into the depths of your hearts it seems to me that I would find there a desire, and that I would hear a secret voice saying I de sire to be what God wishes me and to fulfil all His designs for me. Is not this, in fact, your supreme wish and the term of all your desires? Is it not to perfection it
:
that
your heart aspires?- -an aspiration as legi it is noble and elevated, for it is thus
timate as
by realizing will reach a
God
s designs upon you that you most beautiful throne in heaven,
and that on earth you
will fill the noblest career, a career as brilliant as that of the stars, and that you will- attain true perfection.
to attain perfection a very simple means the sanctification of our state to sanctify the
Now, is
state in
;
which Providence has placed us 388
is
all
SANCTIFICA TION OF ONE S STA TE. that
is
God
s
tence
389
required of us in order to correspond to designs upon us and to give our exis
all
its
price, all its value, all its perfec
tion.
All states are good, though different and un Gold, silver, marble are equal in dignity.
good, though not equally valuable. It is the same with the different states established by Providence. But as the Commonest material,
worked by the hand of a skilful artist, may sur pass in merit the most valuable material, so each one may giv e to his state the greatest merit before God, if he imprint upon it the per fect image of Jesus Christ; this he does by 7
sanctifying it. Let us make this doctrine very clear by ex amination. I. ought we to endeavor to
Why
sanctify our state? tification consist?
tion ral
what does this sancmust we accom
How
We
must apply ourselves to the sanctificaof our state, whatever it may be, for seve
motives
ist.
sists
In
it ?
plish I.
II.
III.
:
It is in this
that each one
s
perfection con
God s designs. Consider the see how the Creator has given its own beauty, to each star a
according to
order of nature to each flower
;
particular splendor, which is different in all. Hence that admirable variety which produces .
the
harmony and
.
.
perfect beauty of the whole.
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
39
The same variety reigns in the world of grace and in that of glory, among the saints on earth and among the elect in heaven. Now, each one acquires the beauty which is proper to him by living holily in his state. .
2d.
.
.
The greatest saints- -St. Joseph, the
Bless
ed Virgin, our Lord Jesus Christ Himself Contem sought no other way of perfection. the life plate they led at Nazareth. 3d. It is thus that we perfectly accomplish God s will, the accomplishment of which is a source of peace and happiness so that a man .
.
.
;
who
applies himself to sanctify his state leads In fact, what is the happiest life here below. the summary of the divine will for each of
us?
What does
it require, if not that we live the state where His providence has
in
worthily placed us?
.
.
.
we amass the greatest Each one finds in his state occasions of practising the virtues and making the sacrifices God asks of him it is there that God shapes the crosses and prepares the graces 4th. It
is
thus that
treasure of merits.
;
proportioned to each of us. 5th. Finally, it is thus that we attain the highest perfection, since one s merit depends less on one s state than upon the manner in which he sanctifies it--the manner in which he .
performs II.
In
its
duties.
what does
.
.
.
.
.
this sanctification consist?
SANCTIFICA TION OF ONE S STA TE. It
391
consists in fulfilling all the duties, bearing all
the trials of our state, and in doing one and the other in a Christian spirit.
We
must distinguish between duty and amusement. Our life is a chain, of duties, not a tissue of amusements; a a mission, a time of labor, not of enjoyment Duties of our state.
;
voyage, not a simple excursion or plan of plea sure. Unfortunately all men do not con .
sider
.
life
.
from a true point of view. There are they are men of lightly, viewing it
some who take it seriously The majority take it duty.
;
through their passions; these are men of plea What we must have in view is duty, not
sure.
pleasure. Now, there are ties of Christians,
two kinds of duties: the du common to us all, and the
duties proper to each one s state. The duties of a Christian consist in avoiding sin, observing the commandments, frequenting the church, instructing one s self by good read
prayer and good works. s state properly refer,
ing, practising
The
.
.
.
duties of one
ist,
to the family 2d, to exterior relations these are duties of civil life and of the laws ;
.
.
.
of good breeding Christianly understood 3d, the obligations of one s state include abo the care of financial affairs: we must regulate ;
.
.
.
our accounts, reduce our expenses to just pro portions, determine in advance how we shall
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
39 2
use our income, and set aside a portion of it for the poor and the Church. ... Trials of our state. The portion of the cross of Jesus Christ which is assigned us, the cross which we must carry each day, is, first, the trials attached to our duties; then our personal miseries those which we find in ourselves .
.
.
.
;
and, finally, the annoyances which
through otheis. We must bear these .
.
ft\&
.
.
we encounter
.
trials, fulfil
these duties,
according to the teaching and example of Jesus Christ. Let us frequently ask, What would be the conduct of Jesus in the circumstances in which I find myself? What would Mary s conduct be ? ... What Christianly
is,
.
would they do, what would they say III.
How
can
we accomplish
How How
tion of our state? fulfil all
bear
all
ist.
our duties? our trials ?
To
rested in
.sanctify it,
love
God Himself
has
my
can can
state
I
?
.
placed
.
.
the sanctifica-
we we
Christianly Christianly
should be inte
as the position in
it,
.
.
me and
wills
which
me
to
be. 2d.
To
duties
I
sanctify
must
respect should vocable.
this
3d.
1
state and fulfil all its do so our resolution in be immovable and irre
my
will to
by the grace of God things possible, and even easy.
will attain thereto
grace renders
all
;
;
SANCTIFICATION OF ONE S STATE.
393
We
must beware of placing any obstacle to and unceasingly ask for it we have a spe cial right to the graces of our state and voca it,
;
tion.
.
.
.
4th. Through the succor sodalities and associations
works.
.
.
.
Through
5th.
which we find in devoted to good
Labor
labor.
is
a great law
established by the Creator, and one to which Without labor we can we must submit. .
.
not
our duties.
fulfil
6th.
By
.
.
and not our ever preferring duty to by
taking for our rule duty,
and caprice
taste
pleasure
.
.
;
The necessary before the
:
useful, the use
ful before the agreeable. 7th. It is very profitable to take part in good works and to be enrolled in benevolent associa tions.
8th.
.
.
.
The most
efficacious
means of
fulfilling
duties faithfully is to make for one s self a rule of life, to have a certain order for the day, all
one
in
which a time
tions.
s
is
fixed for the principal ac these means we shall
By employing
make ours a family life, a life of benevolence and happiness. 9th. There are shoals to be avoided which we must know. They are idleness, luxury, bad reading, balls, immoral plays, forgetfulness of
God
at the period of marriage,
the tongue.
intemperance of
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
394
avoiding these shoals, by following the rules we have just indicated, each one will
By
sanctify his state according to the designs of God, and in this way he will attain the perfec tion
fc^r
heaven.
which he
is
destined on earth and in
CHAPTER LXL RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION. Vani sunt omnes homines in quibus non subest scientia Dei men are vain in whom there is not knowledge of God). Wis. xiii. i. (All
F
the various sciences cultivated by the understanding are precious
human and
beautiful, there
is
one which sur
others by its importance, its beauty, passes Re it is the science of religion. its necessity ligious science is the golden branch of the tree all
:
which bears fruits of life and immortality. I. Importance. To comprehend its prepon derating importance it suffices to consider that religion exercises an essential influence on all humanity, on individuals, on families, on society and states an influence which is not limited to man s existence in this world, but which of knowledge, the one
extends to his future tiny.
.
.
Religion is in
life,
to
his
eternal des
.
is
to the
human race what good
seed
a cultivated land- -a condition of fruitful395
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
396
The
ness and riches.
truths of religion are the principles of moral life and of happiness which make a people flourishing. may say .
.
.
We
holy science of religion is to other sciences what the sun is to the moon, what the soul is to the body their true light, also
that
the
Human sciences need their vigor, and their life. a as complement, without which they religion lead
man
II.
Beauty.
charm sider
into the
of
its
sacred
most deplorable errors.
To
religious study
object.
What,
science?
.
.
.
appreciate the beauty, the
we need
only con
in fact, is the object of
God and His works
the
universe, creatures, and the Creator, consider ed in their great relations; man- -man par ticularly, his nature, his origin, his eternal des tiny.
What is more vast and imposing, what is more magnificent and delightful, than this ob It contains all the questions most worthy ject ? of
man
s
investigations,
mind and heart. That which adds
still
most interesting
more
to his
to the interest
is
that this noble science rests on the surest prin it is drawn from books as true as they ciples ;
are charming, even in a literary point of view. I mean the books of the Bible and the writings In a word, the of the Fathers of the Church.
science of religion is the queen of sciences, the sun of the human intelligence, the tree of life,
RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION
397
the fountain of living water, where man must drink to satisfy at the same time the thirst of
mind and
heart.
The other
sciences,
in
though good
do not
them
selves, satisfy us they do not corre spond to the needs of our souls for this reason they cannot be separated from religious science, ;
;
which must complete and give them their life. Without this vital branch the tree of science bears but poisoned flowers and dead fruit. III. Necessity. We must know our religion to live well and to live happily. The law of God which religion teaches is the rule of hu .
man it is
life
to
;
fall
this holy
to observe
it is
to live well
into every error.
law we must
first
.
.
to forget
;
Now, to observe know it he who ;
possesses this noble knowledge will easily ap ply himself to conforming his life thereto.
From it is
that time he will find happiness, as far as below for God willed that
attainable here
;
His holy law should be for man a principle of true happiness even in this world Justice exalteth a nation : but sin maketh nations miserable :
(Prov. xiv. 34).
We
should know our religion well in order to preserve the treasure of faith in the midst of the assaults of modern impiety. To know it well is to possess not only an exact and cateche
knowledge, but that reasoning knowledge which includes the invincible proofs upon
tical
398
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
which the truths of
faith
are based.
It
is
of
that the apostle speaks
profound knowledge Be always ready to satisfy tells us that hope every one that asketh you a reason which is in you (i Peter iii. 15).
this
when he
:
<>/
CHAPTER
LXII.
GOOD WORKS. Eris quasi hortus irriguus et sicut fans aquarum, cujus non aqua (Thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like
deficient
a fountain Iviii.
of
water whose waters
shall
not
fail).
ISAIAS
ii.
O whom
are these beautiful words of the
Holy Spirit applied ? able and benevolent
To the charit man who feeds
the hungry, clothes the naked, comforts the Let me give you all of this beauti ful passage Deal thy bread to tJie hungry, and
afflicted.
:
bring the needy and the Jiarborless into thy house ; when thou shalt see one naked, cover him, and de Then shall thy light break spise not thy own flesh. forth as morning, and the glory of the Lord shall When thou shalt pour out thy soul gather thee up. hungry, and shalt satisfy the afflicted soul, then shall thy light rise up in darkness, and thy darkness shall be as the noonday. A nd the Lord will give thee rest continually, and will fill thy soul with brightness, and deliver thy bones, and thou shalt be like a watered and like a to the
garden,
of water whose waters shall not fail 7-1
1). 29S
fountain
(Is,
Iviii.
SODALITY DIRECTOR
400
S
MANUAL.
happy man on
it is he Let us con sider for a moment this happiness, and let us see what we have to do to merit it.
Yes,
who
is
if
there
is
a
earth,
charitable and benevolent.
What
Happiness of benevolence.
I.
happiness of a charitable this happiness consist?
man ?
In
is
the
what does
The charitable and benevolent man is happy because he is loved of God and men. He is loved of God, who sees in him His most per image. For God is charity He gives forth His blessings and His gifts as the sun does its and the charitable man, like floods of light God, multiplying benefits about him, seems, like fect
;
;
It is for to give forth a divine splendor. the wins he that reason this regard of God of His love and com and becomes the object placency. He is loved by men by those who are the objects of his benevolence as well as by those who witness it. ... He is loved during
Him,
regretted at death, and his memory, Vincent of Paul, is held in bene diction during future generations. He is happy because he makes good use of
life,
he
is
like that of St.
Could he employ the superfluous has received from God in a nobler he means manner than relieving the unfortunate ? How easy and consoling will be the account he shall have to render of it to God He is happy because he makes a good use of his fortune.
!
.
.
.
GOOD WORKS. his time.
Many
quently even in vere account of
Not
so
with
lose sin; it
the
401
time in
frivolities,
will
they
fre
render a se
to their sovereign Judge. the time benevolent man ;
which remains to him after the accomplish ment of the duties of. his state he devotes to studying the wants of the poor, to devising means to relieve them Beat us qui intelligit super egenum et pauperem Blessed is he that understandeth concerning the needy and the :
poor
(Ps. xl.
He
i).
happy because he shall be filled with The Lord will pour into his heart blessings. and peace joy, with the sweet hope of his is
greatest mercies
suram bonam vest rum
:
Estate misericordes
et confertani
.
.
.
:
.
dabunt
.
in
.
mensinum
and it shall be given unto you : good measure, and pressed down, and shaken to gether, and running over, shall they give into your Give,
bosom (Luke
vi. 38).
The
In exer practice of benevolence. we have before benevolence must our cising rule the double of and charity. eyes justice II.
The
rule of justice indicates the obligation of aims and the degrees of this obligation.
who are in easy circumstances, and who, meeting the requirements which Chris tians consider as belonging to their state and their position, have anything superfluous, should reserve a portion of it for the poor, the Church, All
after
402
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
and works of charity.
In cases of grave neces
sity- -in public calamities occasioned
by
scarci
in times of moral ty, floods, or other afflictions aid is required to calamities, when material ;
preserve a people from perversion, from re ligious corruption, propagated either through a bad press or impious schools--then, according to the doctrine of theologians, the interpreters
of the Christian law, and still more those
all who have any means, who are rich, must make
by taking even from the necessities of They are obliged, then, to deny in behalf of charity not only frivo themselves lous and vain expenditures, but even those which their position does not too rigidly re sacrifices
their state.
quire.
The
rich
who
poor, and who
turn
away
their eyes from the
these grave obliga hear from the sovereign Judge these words of condemnation Depart from me, you cursed, into everlasting fire, for I was hungry and Their fate shall be you gave me not to eat. fail
to
fulfil
tions, shall
:
.
.
.
him who refused Lazarus the crumbs which fell from his table The rich man died, and he was buried in hell (Luke xvi. 22). that of
:
The much
rule of charity consists in giving, not as we ought, but as much as we can. It
as
thus announced by the holy Tobias: If thou have much, give abundantly : if thou have little, take care even so to bestow ivillingly a little. is
GOOD WORKS. It
was
403
end of his life that supreme counsels to
at the
man gave
his
this holy
his son in
All the days of thy life have God in mind take heed ihou never consent to sin, and : thy nor trangress the commandments of the Lord our Give alms out of thy substance, and turn God. these words
:
thy face from any poor person : for so it shall come to pass that the face of the Lord shall not
away
riot
be
turned from
thee.
According
to
thy ability
If tliou have much, give abundantly
be merciful.
if thou have
little,
:
take care even so to bestow will
For thus thou storest up to tJiyself ingly a little. a good reward for the day of necessity ; for alms deliver from all sin, and from death, and vvill not suffer the soul to go into darkness (Tob. iv. 6-n).
The
charity is the easiest and the most conformable to the spirit of Jesus Christ, and most fruitful in blessings from above, for, as the apostle tells us He who soiveth sparingly shall also reap sparingly ; and lie who soweth in blessings that is, abundant lybest;
rule of
it
is
:
shall also reap blessings (2 Cor.
ix. 6).
Moreover, charity proportions its alms to the need of the moment. When the want is great it does not calculate, justly relying on the
words
of Jesus Christ
:
Omni petenti
te tribue ;
date, et dabitur vobis- -Give to every one that asketh thee. Give, and it shall be given you .
.
.
.
(Luke
.
.
vi. 30, 38).
Blessed
is
the
man animated by
this spirit of
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
404
the mercy of God is assured to him charity Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain :
;
mercy. If
they are
still in
sin
they shall be enabled to
leave the sad state, for alms deliver from all and from death (Tob iv. 1 1 Dan. iv. 24).
sin,
;
they are already in God s grace they will persevere therein and continually increase in If
virtue.
and sinners,
they are charitable, they shall all on the last day hear these words: Come, ye blessed of my Father, possess you the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was liungry, and you gave rne to eat. ... Amen I say to you, as long as you did it to one of these my least brethren you did it to me (Matt. xxv. 34). All, just
if
will secure their salvation
;
CHAPTER THE SOULS Sancta
IN
et salubtis est cogitatio pro
solvantur
(It
is
therefore a holy
LXIII.
PURGATORY. defunctis exorare, ut a pcccatis and wholesome thought to
pray for the dead, that they be loosed from sins).
2
MACH.
xii, 46.
MONG the devotions devoutly practised by the Church there the privilege of
is
one which has
being recommended
by the Holy Ghost Himself; it is prayer for the dead, charity to the souls in purgatory. read of Judas Machabeus, the chief of the
We
armies of Israel, that, after a victory gained over the enemies of his people, he had sacrifice offered for the dead, for the soldiers who per ished on the battle-field, and Holy Scripture praised this action, adding that it is a holy and
wholesome thought
to
pray for
the dead, that they
may be loosed from their sins. Then let us love this truly holy and
To
salutary
nourish and strengthen it more and more in our souls, let us consider the mo tives for it and the manner of practising it. I. Motives. should pray for the dead
devotion!
We
405
/}
-
SODALIT Y DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
$
because
faith
and charity make
it
a duty for
us.
What does faith tell us ? That there is a pur gatory, and that the souls detained therein may be helped by the suffrages of the living. Pur is
gatory
of the just
where the souls
who
are not wholly pure are cleansed and other sufferings.
b} fire
We
a place of expiation
know
that a soul leaving this world may mortal sin, or in a state of per fect grace, or in a state of imperfect grace. If it is in a state of mortal sin it falls under the
be
in a state of
decrees of divine Justice and descends at once into hell
:
this is perdition.
that
If it is in a state
of
pure of all stain before God, and free of all debt to His justice it en ters at once into the abode of glory. But if it is in a state of imperfect grace, even
perfect grace
though
it
is,
be destined for heaven,
it
will only
have endured a can enter hea defiled just expiation. Nothing ven and this soul, though in God s grace, is not free of all stain nor absolved of all debt. It bears the stain of venial sins, and a debt of temporal punishment which it has not been enter there later, after
it
shall
;
pay before its death. Nothing, how was easier for it, since the divine Mercy gave it abundant means. Not having profit ed of this time of mercy, it must now satisfy the divine Justice which sends it to the flames careful to
ever,
THE SOULS IN PURGA TOR Y.
407
it will remain until the -Donee reddas novissimum paid-
of purgatory, where last farthing
is
quadrantem (Matt. v. 26). This is what faith tells us. What does charity tell us ? Love your neigh bor as yourself; give to the poor; have com passion on those who suffer and those who mourn.
you yourself were in these expiating flames, suffering the most excruciating pain, would you If
not be glad to receive relief? far distant
when
Ah
!
is
the day
this supposition will be a real not go to purgatory ? If you
? Shall you do not go to purgatory, it will be either because you go lower to the terrible eternal fire or di
ity
one or the other very proba help the souls in purgatory as you would one day wish others to help you. rect to heaven.
ble?
.
.
.
Charity
Is
Then
commands us who are in
larly to those
to give alms, particu the greatest need and
cannot help themselves. The souls in purgato ry are in greatest need; they endure hunger
and every privation, consumed as they are by the desire to see their God, and they can no longer help themselves, for the time of
mercy is passed. Then it is for us them and to exercise towards them works of mercy.
to all
help the
Charity pities all who suffer and all who mourn. Ah the sufferings and tears here be!
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
408
low are nothing compared to those of purga There an hour of suffering is more than a hundred years of the most austere penance on ear tli Charitable souls, relieve (hnit.) here below; misery yes, do all you can to re tory.
.
.
.
lieve it, but do not forget your unhappy breth ren in purgatory, a prey to the most terrible suffering, which you can always alleviate. must pray for the souls in purgatory be
We
cause God, the souls themselves, our own in terest ask it. These souls are First, it is God who asks it. He ardently desires to infinitely dear to Him. be able to admit them to the abode of glory, but His justice forbids it unless a satisfaction be offered Him by the suffrages of the living. If we offer it Him, if our charity break the chains, open the prison of these dear captives, and permit them to fly to the bosom of their Father, whom they overwhelm with joy, what It is we who must our merit be in His eyes give Him these dear children, and He regards this charity as exercised towards Himself !
Mihi fecistis.
The
souls themselves ask
it.
What
earnest
supplications they address us! They are justly assigned the words of the holy man Job Miseremini met- -Have pity on me, have pity on me, at :
least
you
my friends,
hath touched
because the
me (Job
xix. 21).
hand of the Lord
Ah!
if
a father
THE
SO ULS
IN P URGA TOR Y.
49
in cruel suffering were to ask a son to give them some relief, a drop of water, what child would be so unnatural as to refuse it, as
and mother
power for them ? Our own interest asks it. As much relief as you procure the souls in purgatory, so much will
not to hasten to do
all in
his
your turn, says St. Jerome. These words of the saint are only a com mentary upon those of our Saviour: Blessed are
you
receive in
beautiful
the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Give, and it shall be given to you. With what measure
you mete, vi.
;
it
Matt,
shall be measured to you again (Luke Blessed is he that under standetJi
vii.)
concerning the needy deliver
him
and
in the evil
the poor ; the
day (Ps.
xl.
of the Cross tells us, with just
i).
Lord St.
reason
:
will
John Give
alms for your own sake. Nothing, moreover, is more proper to make us lead a Christian and perfect life. Devotion to the faithful departed recalls to us the most salutary truths; it reminds us of death, judg
ment,
what tal
even
hell,
sin is in the
sin,
but the
It shows us paradise. of -not Godonly mor eyes It excites least venial sin.
of
us to Christian penance, to the good employ ment of our time, and to the performance of
good works.
Such are the precious advan
tages which charity to the souls in purgatory procures our souls. // is, then, a holy and
some thought
to
pray for
the dead.
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
410
Practice.
II.
What
devotion be, and
should the practice of
how should we
help the souls in purgatory? must help the souls in purgatory by our prayers, by our good works, by the holy sacri this
We
fice of
ments ist.
;
the Mass and the reception of the sacra finally, by the application of indulgences.
Prayers.
All prayers are
good
;
public
and private, morning and evening prayer, lita all serve to relieve the souls nies and rosaries in
purgatory.
Good works alms, fasting, all acts of mortification or charity. 3d. The Mass. This divine sacrifice, in virtue 2d.
is offered for the living and One of the holiest and most mentoi ious works, says St. Augustine, is to offer prayer and And, speak sacrifice for the faithful dt par ted. ing of his mother, St. Monica, the same holy Father says I pray all who shall read these pages The to remember Jier at the altar of tJie Lord. pious faithful have Masses celebrated for the
of
its
institution,
the dead.
:
departed they assist at the holy sacri they offer Holy Communion for these suf
faithful fice
;
;
fering souls.
A last and not the least 4lh. Indulgences. owerful means of helping our suffering breth There ren is the application of indulgences. are some which are partial- -for example, those I
which we gain by making acts of Faith, Hope,
THE SOULS IN PURGA TORY. and Charity
41
I
by reciting the rosary by making the sign of the cross with holy water, or even without holy water; by uttering certain ejacuprayers,
latory
;
;
such
as,
My
Jesus,
mercy
!
There are plenary indulgences, which we gain by receiving the sacraments on certain days, and also by making the Road of the Cross. This last devotion, which may be practised as often as
we
wish, is singularly advantageous as suf for the souls in purgatory, besides being frage the source of all the graces that we derive from
considering the Passion.* It
who
is,
then, as easy to relieve the holy souls
suffer in the place of expiation as
it
is sal
utary and meritorious. Let us to-day redouble our zeal and charity for them, as we are asked to do by Him who said Blessed are iJie merciful, :
for they shall obtain mercy. * See Christian instructed
on Indulgences^ Maurel.
CHAPTER
LXIV.
PREPARATION FOR DEATH. Estate parati, quid qua hora non putatis Filius hominis veniet (Be you then also ready, for at the hour you think not the Son of man will come). LUKE xii. 40.
^REPARATION
death is here re commended by our Saviour: Be ready, He tells us, for at the Jwur you think
not the Son of
man
for.
will come.
He
will
come
you from this world to appear before His tribunal and render an account of His
to call
works.
Prepare yourselves, He tells us, that you may not be surprised in a state of mortal sin and condemned by the sovereign Judge prepare yourselves, that you may be found in a state of ;
grace, faithful to His service, and His eternal rewards.
worthy of
Let us attentively consider this great warn ing of the Son of God. Let us see why we ought to prepare for death, and how we ought ct>
to
make I.
this preparation.
Necessity of preparing ourselves for death. 412
PRE PARA TION FOR DEA TH.
413
must we think of death and prepare our selves for this supreme moment? When an st. Prudence makes it a duty. to a man, announced is future event important when he is to perform a great and critical act upon which his fortune, his glory, or his life shall depend, does not prudence oblige him to
Why i
make preparation
for it?
and
is
battle,
an artist
is
this battle
If a
king is to give crown if to decide "his
to paint a picture
;
upon which
his
fortune will depend if an archer is to shoot an arrow at a certain mark, under pain of being burned alive if he fail, will they not, with such ;
grave interests at stake, make every prepara tion, take every precaution, use every means to insure success?
death awaits us in the future nothing certain. Upon my death shall depend eternity my kingdom and my crown are
Now, is
;
more
my
;
my life, my fortune are at stake, a fortune, a crown which shall be imperishable, which shall be gained, or lost irrevocably. Then would it not be sovereign at
stake
and a
;
life,
imprudence to make no preparation for so su preme a moment? I must die well, under pain of being burned alive in a fire which shall never be extinguished. Should I not take every mea sure to escape such a misfortune? 2d. must prepare ourselves to die, in order to avoid a bad death. call a bad death
We
We
SODA LIT Y DIRECTORS MANUAL.
414
that of the sinner
who
dies in the state of
mor
This death, says the Holy Spirit, is very bad yes, very bad it is the misfortune of misfortunes, for it is a terrible thing, as the apos tle says, to fall into the hands of the living God, to be struck with the sentence of damnation, to hear these terrifying words Depart from me, tal sin.
;
:
you cursed, into everlasting fire. This terrible fate will be ours .
.
.
we do not ourselves a sincere conversion and prepare by a Christian life to die the death of the just.
You
if
enmity with God, your conscience you persevere in this state. Alas you will die therein, and your death will be the No, you tell me, signal of your damnation. tells
I
live in
you
!
;
have no intention to die
as death approaches,
in
this state
amend.
will
I
;
later,
Vain de
hope upon which you dare to rely Delaying repentance is the snare which leads to eternal perdition
lusion, frail
and
live in sin
fatal
!
greatest number of souls who are lost You will amend later, you Christians.
the
among
but will you have the time ? Will you the mind ? Shall you have the will ? Who has promised you the grace of conver Ah He who sion at the hour of death ? offers pardon to the sinner does not promise say
;
have
!
him the morrow. live,
tions
No,
it is
a rule that as
you there are excep you do you think they are numerous? Out
so
shall
die.
If
PR EPA RA TION FOR DEA TH.
4*5
who live ill, how many do you well? Have we not all reason to
of a hundred
think
die
tremble? And would you take any risk? Ah my dear brother, return to God at once. 3d. Preparation for death is necessary, be cause we must ensure ourselves a good death. A good death is the grace of graces, and the greatest blessing we can have here below, since It is the golden door it secures us salvation. !
which opens heaven
to
vis.
Whoever
dies in a state of grace dies a good but a good death is susceptible of a
death double degree, which ;
When we
guish.
it
behooves us to
distin
leave this world in a state of
grace, but not free of all debt towards the di vine Justice- -this is the death of the just, a good
When death, but one which could be better. we appear before God, not simply in a state of grace, but also pure of all stain, free of all debt to the divine Justice, rich in merits and vir tues, then this is the death of the saints, which Holy Scripture tells us is precious in the siglit
of God.
What
is
die such a
ness
more desirable? death? Then to
we must
merit
it
Who
would not
attain this happi
by a holy preparation
for death. II.
Manner
There is remote and the
of preparing for death.
a double preparation: one
other proximate.
is
SODALITY DIRECTOR
416
S
MANUAL.
The remote preparation should begin from our youth and last all our life it consists in being in a state of grace and leading a Chris ;
tian
life.
We
must keep ourselves
we may
that
be always
in a state of grace, safe, even in case of
How many
sudden death.
One
there are
who
die
found dead in his bed, an suddenly in his arm-chair, another in his garden;other some fall dead in the street, at table, at a ball, at the theatre, at play, in church others fall by accidents, by crime; an assassin may surprise a traveller; a carriage may overturn and crush its inmates; a train may go off the track or over a ship may be swallowed up in a a precipice storm a factory, a mill, a mine may explodein fine, a thousand other accidents which we !
is
;
7
;
;
witness every day may carry men off suddenly, leaving them not a moment for preparation.
Woe
to those
tal sin
Now, may pen
?
are then in a state of
mor
not any of these accidents hap
Then should we not be ever
of grace,
Ought
who
!
I
in a state
and unceasingly lead a Christian life ? not regulate even my temporal affairs
such a manner as to merit after my death no reproach from my creditors, my heirs, nor particularly from God, to whom I shall have to render an account of all things? This consists Proximate preparation. ist. in
PREPARA TION FOR DEA TH.
41 7
devoutly preparing ourselves for the last passage in time of sickness. A grave illness, the messenger and forerun ner of death, is a grace from God those who in
;
know how views
to
acquire
profit
the
by
it
merit
according to His of confessors and
martyrs.
Now, how shall we profit by it? How are we to sanctify sickness? How are we to spend our leave this
days in a Christian manner and world in a holy state ? last
When we illness
feel the first
we must beware
symptoms
of a serious
of the usual illusions
with which the sick flatter themselves, deceiv ing themselves and permitting others to de ceive them as to the danger of their state. If I have not sufficiently evident proof of my danger I must ask a sincere friend, and learn whether my illness is likely to terminate fatally. Once I have learned this, I must turn to God and think only of appearing before Him. Then my first act must be to accept the sick ness from the hand of God, my Creator and
Lord, with complete submission to His divine will and in union with the sufferings of my Saviour. St. Ignatius wishes that we should receive it even with joy, because it is no less a gift than health. I
life
must also make to God the and accept my death with
sacrifice of all
my
my
heart-
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
418
accept it in expiation of my sins, and in union with the death of my Jesus on the cross, and in
a spirit of love for
me.
for
life
as a sacrifice
Him who
first gave His by thus offering my death of love to my Saviour that I may
It
is
share the happiness of the martyrs, who exer cise the greatest act of love by giving their life for Jesus. The sick
must not defer receiving the
last
sacraments.
They are a great consolation, a which the Saviour has prepared succor, great
for
His
faithful in
their last trials.
The
re
ception of the last sacraments is also a great duty for the faithful to accomplish. If you ful fil
it
more
promptly, seasonably, you will do so with edification to your neighbor and more
profit to
your
soul.
Let the sick be patient;
let
them not
smallest portion of the cross which
lose the is
given borne well, will serve them in lieu of purgatory. Let them draw their strength from the crucifix and prayercontinual prayer as long as it is possible for them. Short prayers,- -abridged acts of faith, hope,
them.
Their sufferings,
if
and contrition, the holy names of Mary, and Joseph, the prayer .of our Saviour in the Garden of Olives, and other short aspirations, are the easiest and best. charity,
Jesus,
It is also
a practical
mode
of prayer for the
PRE PARA TION FOR DEA TH. sick to look with affection holy images of Jesus, Mary,
4*9
upon a medal, the and Joseph, which
to their heart.
they will kiss and clasp Let the blessed candle be the faith, hope, and
as a symbol of which the Chris
lit
charity in
tian wishes to die.
May we
all
die thus
!
We
docile from this
happiness if, teachings of our Saviour, for the
supreme
act of our
shall
we prepare life
have
moment
this
to the
ourselves
here below.
CHAPTER LXV. CARE OF THE
SICK.
Infirmos curate (Heal the sick).
HE
MATT.
x. 8.
care, the service of the sick occupies
one of the first places in the Christian works of charity. The Saviour shows us the excellence of it by His own example, by His tender compassion for the sick, for all who, afflicted with any infirmity, sought Him from all parts He rejected no one, He received all with kindness, cured them, relieving at the same time the miseries of their soul and body. ;
What He
by example He also Speaking of the love of our neighbor, He offers us as model the good Sa maritan who bound up the wounds of the un fortunate traveller whom he found half dead in the way. This is not all when He sends His manifests
teaches by words.
:
apostles to preach the Gospel, He particularly recommends to them the care of the sick In :
firmos curate.
the
kingdom
He
Finally, expressly promises of heaven to those who shall prac420
CARE OF THE
work
tise this
He
shall
shall
do
of
mercy
;
SICK.
and
He
421
declares that
regard as done to Himself all that we for our sick brethren: / was sick, and
me (Matt. xxv. you This work of chanty is visited
that frequently the body of the sick is
care
36). all
the
more
excellent
bestowed upon the
instrumental in bringing about the salvation of their souls, and they are thus prepared for a Christian death. Happy they who devote and consecrate their life to a work so meritorious Happy also they who perform it in a Christian manner when an occasion presents itself! This occasion is to be found in every family when it pleases God to !
any of the members with sickness. should we then act? What should be the conduct of the sick man s kindred and visit
How
What
in particular is the duty of him ? of those in charge The I. Kindred and friends of the sick man.
friends?
members
among
of one body are intimately united themselves, according to the words of
the apostle: If one member suffer anything, alt Thus the members suffer with it (i Cor. xii. 26).
when any member falls must sincerely compassionate him and manifest the interest and charity which they would wish others to manifest for them in a
in a
sick
Christian family,
all
like case.
Consequently they must not
fail
to
pray for
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
422
him; they must be tender and considerate of him, never irritating him, either by noise or by speaking of things which displease him. They must all be watchful of his soul s inte rest and careful that he receives the rites of the Church in time. It would be doing him a great wrong, it would be betraying his dearest interests, to conceal from him through a false consideration the danger of his state,, and to
him with an illusive hope of recovery which would prevent his receiving the sacra
flatter
ments.
They must avoid complaining of bear with
patience
the sick,
the
trouble, the expense occasions. Let them
inconveniences, the which sickness usually
be always willing to and to render them any other services which, no doubt, they themselves may one day require in their turn. When they visit the sick they must avoid those whispered conversations which are fre quently so irritating to the patient. Their con versation, moreover, must be prudent and edi fying they should speak to him only of things which can console him in the Lord. If the sick man die, they should accept the trial with sub mission to the will of God, and render all the hist services to the deceased with Christian
watch with the
sick,
;
Besides a fitting burial, they shall fre quently have Masses offered for the repose of piety.
CARE OF THE
SICK.
423
and distribute alms, and each one shall and gain indulgences for the same end, as pray he would one day wish others to do for him. his soul,
Those who are specially charged with the service and care of the sick have a great and beautiful mission to fulfil they must look at this mission with the eyes of faith, and appreciate and love it in the Sick-nurses.
II.
;
Lord.
They should and see
his
in
also sincerely love their charge, person Him who shall one day
say to them / ivas sick, and you visited me. They should faithfully bestow upon him all the corporal care which his condition requires, :
and be more zealous
still
for the spiritual
good
of his soul.
When
Providence has charged you with the
care of sickness, give yourself to the work with unreserved deVotion be ready night and day ;
to assist
your charge
charitable
practising
work all
in
his needs.
all
This
you occasions of
will afford
kinds of virtues
:
patience,
meek
ness, continual mortification. If
the sick
man
be exacting and unreasonable,
do not complain be no tle, and devoted. ;
Keep
his
less
compassionate, gen
room scrupulously
neat,
and
let
there be flowers or something pleasant to re create his eyes, and some pious object to sug gest to him pious thoughts.
SOD \LITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL,
424
Try to console and cheer him, not only by the alleviations approved by the physician, but by entertaining him with edifying and agreeable conversation. Have also books pro per to interest and suitably divert him. Moreover, you should always, in all thingsalso
a capital
pointtreat your patient with and tact. To this end it is very nec prudence essary to know, first, not only the nature and this
is
gravity of the disease, but also the sick
man
himself, his disposition, his opinions, his ante
cedent conduct. In general avoid speaking to him of his busi ness, of his enemies, of all that could irritate him, excite vexatious feelings, or weary his mind. At opportune moments suggest to him motives for resignation for example, tell him that sickness is a natural effect of our condition here below no one is exempt, neither rich nor poor; the saints themselves are subject to infir mities and sufferings, but they know how to sweeten the bitterness of them. God sends ;
;
sickness in
mercy though painful to nature, it causes a powerful means of salvation us to share a little in the holy Passion of the it
;
is
;
Saviour.
Know how
to
refute
the objections of the
only affected me, they will say, I but my wife, my could easily be resigned children- -what is going to become of them? sick.
If
it
;
CARE OF THE
SICK.
That which troubles me most
work nor pray.
Alas
is
am
4*5
that
cannot
I
so young. Listen quietly to all their regrets, and, . while compassionating the trials of their sick ness, meet their repinings with the principles of faith, such as that the will of God is to .
.
.
.
!
I
still
.
be preferred to all other blessings,-- -the pa providence of God watches ever the widow and orphan, the Passion of Jesus
ternal
Christ, etc.
The principal care of the sick-nurse should be to procure for his charge the happiness of receiving in time, and worthily, the sacraments of the Church. To this end let him pray God, consider all the circumstances, and study the patient, himself to this great duty.
dispose him to worthily
fulfil
When he is satisfied that the disease is mortal, he would do very wrong to deceive his charge with false hopes of recovery. If he is not fa miliar with the thought of death, lead him gradually to suspect, to recognize the gravity of his state, and to comprehend what prudence requires of him.
Persuade him to place his confidence
who
can,
health.
if
God
He
wills,
gives us
powerful to preserve
it
him
restore
in
God,
to perfect
life; He is sufficiently to us, and to cure us of
maladies which baffle human even deliver us in a short time
skill. ;
but
He if it
can
please
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
426
Him to prolong the trial nothing is better than to conform ourselves to the fatherly will which disposes all things for our good. Experience is much uncer and and that the most tainty many surprises,
teaches us that in sickness there
skilful
physicians
are
frequently
Prudence commands us to foresee take precautions. no harm, while too
mistaken. all
and to
Too much prudence can do much confidence may cause
irreparable evils. It is well usually not to propose confession abruptly. Speak first of the sick man s suffer
God, who can help him when human remedies fail. Then watch a fa vorable moment to ask your charge if a visit ings, of confidence in
would be agreeable to him. Sometimes it would be well to suggest his join ing in the novena which is made for his recov ery then it will be natural to speak to him of the sacraments as a most efficacious act of devotion. Other times you may attain your end by explaining to him the effect of the sac raments even on the body, particularly the cor poral effect of Extreme Unction, which is called with reason the pharmacy of Almighty God. from
a
priest
;
If
the sick
man
takes refuge in endless delays his pretexts and destroy the
adroitly meet cause of his repugnance (
;
it
may be
a false hope
of recovery, fear of confession, the difficulties of which he exaggerates.
CARE OF THE
SICK.
42 7
If he is obstinate in differing, do not force him but pray him to determine a day and hour which will suit him. Meanwhile lead him to say some prayers, to perform some pious or ;
charitable act.
he openly refuses, if he answers by blas phemies, you must cease to urge him for the moment, and, without losing confidence, re double your charity and attentions to him until If
In a more favorable moment presents itself. the meantime do not cease to pray and to have prayers said for him.
When
the sick
the sacraments
man
has decided to receive aid, or at least offer
you may
your concurrence, to dispose him Holy Communion and to facilitate
to receive his thanks
giving.
After he has received the sacraments try to maintain him in Christian sentiments see that he is not distracted by useless or dangerous ;
visits.
See that he have an opportunity to gain some plenary indulgence, particularly that the indul gence granted by Benedict XIV. be applied to him.
Gently aid him to make acts of faith, of con fidence, of love of God and his neighbor, of forgiveness of offences, of repentance, of aban donment to the will of God. Give him holy water from time to time, or
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
428 offer
him the
mercy
crucifix to kiss, saying
:
My
Jesus,
!
In his
let the blessed candle be light to be desired that a priest recite the prayers for the dying, but in his absence any
ed.
agony
It is
other person may say them. Avoid sobbing, or any sound that could disturb the piety of the Sprinkle him with holy water and put dying. the crucifix to his lips, and softly suggest to him at intervals these short aspirations Jesus, Jesus, JtS2is / Lord, into Tliy Jiands I commend my spi :
rit.
Jesus,
Mary, Joseph ! Holy Virgin Mary, Mary, mother of grace, mother of
pray for me !
mercy, protect us from the enemy, receive us at the hour of our death !
Avoid
if
feeling the extremities too they are growing cold.
much
to see
The
signs of approaching death are a failing and intermittent pulse, difficulty in breathing, a sinking and fading of the eyes, a tremulous and
mechanical movement of the hands, a cold sweat on the brow, and tears falling from the eyes.
Among
the most certain signs of death are a stiffness of the whole body, a com
coldness and
plete cessation of the pulse and respiration. When the soul has left the body you should it to God by reciting the customary of the Church. As to the body, which prayers has been the temple of the Holy Spirit, it should
recommend
CARE OF THE
SICK.
429
be buried with decency and respect; for this reason it is well to confide this sacred duty to persons whose age and respect render them proper to fulfil it. Behold the conduct of Christian charity to
wards the sick and dying. Happy those who this holy duty to others They shall re ceive in reward the grace to die the death of
fulfil
the saints.
!
CHAPTER
LXVI.
PARADISE. Gaudettj et exultate, quoniam merces vestra copiosa est in
(Be glad and rejoice, for your reward
MATT.
is
ccelis
very great in heaven).
v. 12.
F
the Christian has combats to sustain in he also possesses a power
this world,
source of courage in the thought of the reward which awaits him in the other. The Saviour Himself proposes heaven to us as a motive for courage and happiness. He wishes that in the midst of all trials the thought of our reward should not only sustain us but fill us with consolation and joy. /;/ that day, our Sa ful
viour says- -that is, in the day of your suffer ings be glad and rejoice, for your reward is very should think, then, of hea great in heaven. in the practice of virtue in ven to encourage us the service of the Master, who prepares for us
We
this ineffable
Now, what
reward. is
heaven? and what
is
the happi
ness which the elect enjoy in heaven?
What is heaven ? Heaven, the abode of the blessed, is properly God s mansion, the place which He has created I.
430
PARAD for His royal abode, His of His elect.
SE.
431
own
dwelling and that
an immutable and eternal abode of hap piness and glory, where this great Monarch of the universe dwells with His faithful creatures like a father with his children. Faith clearly teaches us the existence of this It is
we
abode, and ther
who
confess
art in heaven.
that heaven
when we
say, Our Fashows us also Scripture
it
a distinct place from the earth The heaven of heaven is the Lord s, but the earth He has given to tJie children of men (Ps. cxiii. is
:
1 Heaven is the throne of God, 6). His footstool (Matt. v. 34, 35).
at the
is
explicit as to the location of
is less
Scripture
heaven
the earth
same time
it constantly speaks the occupying highest regions of celes tial space. // is a trutJi commonly received in the Church, says Suarez, and absolutely certain, that beyond the movable heavens there exists an im
of
it
;
as
movable heaven (a sphere), more noble than all more luminous and more beautiful, the abode of the blessed. It is called the empyrean
others,
heaven (the heaven of fire), because, like fire, which is luminous in its nature, this corporal place is like * the centre
of
Heaven
light.
is
God
s
throne and His most sub He dwells by a special
where presence, and where lime temple, *
Suar., torn,
ii.
De
He Op. Sex.
manifests His glory Dier,>
L
i.
c. 4, n. 2.
SODALITY DIRECTORS MANUAL.
43 2
God is present every does not everywhere manifest His presence in the same way. He is pres
to the eyes of the elect.
where, but
He
all the universe, which for this reason is called the temple of nature. He is present in sacred edifices consecrated to His worship,
ent in
which are called temples of prayer. He is present in the Catholic Church, which is also His temple His living temple, the temple of His grace. But He is present in a wholly dif ferent manner in heaven, the temple of His
He there displays a glory of which all glory. the splendor of the universe, all the beauty of the holy Catholic Church and the brilliancy of her august ceremonies, present but a feeble image. Who shall tell the magnificence of heaven? Only there our Lord is magnificent, says the pro
phet (Isaias
The beauty and immen
xxxiii. 21).
sity of this palace are worthy of the Monarch who inhabits it and we should say first that they are unspeakable. No eye hath not seen, nor ;
;
ear heard, neitJier hath it entered into the heart of man, zvhat things God hath preparedfor them that love
Him
(i
Cor.
ii.
9).
These words of the apostle show us that in this world we can have but a very imperfect knowledge of heaven we see it only imper fectly, by the aid of faith, and veiled in figures Per speculum, in cenigmate but on leaving this ;
PARADISE. life
we
contemplate
Him
as
He
is,
and we
rejoice with joy unspeakable and glorified
sJialt
Pet.
(i
shall
433
i.
8).
life we cannot know the beauty man born blind cannot compre
In this mortal
of heaven.
A
hend the splendor of the sun nor the magnifi cence of nature, because he is deprived of light, -a necessary condition for seeing the material In like manner it is impossible for us
world
to perceive the beauties of
heaven while we are
deprived of the light of glory. have, however, in this world a superna tural light, that of faith, which enables us to see,
We
through images and tion,
The
rection,
Paul,
figures, a
shadow, a
reflec
were, of the splendor of paradise. transfiguration of the Saviour, His resur as
to
it
His ascension, His apparition to St. other saints, offer St. Teresa, and
rays, as it were, of the heavenly country, but very feehle rays, proportioned to the weak ness of our mortal eyes. Besides these faint shadows of heavenly glory vis
we
have passages from Scripture which us of the heavenly Jerusalem. It was the a St. to see it for few John given Apostle also
tell
moments
in a prophetic vision, and he tells us marvellous things of it. The city itself, he of was says, pure gold, its walls of jasper stone, its foundations of topaz, emerald, sapphire, ame thyst, and all manner of precious stones, its
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
434
A
of pearl. sun, a thousand times more brilliant than our earthly planet, there makes eternal day in the midst of the city is the tree ;
of
bearing perpetual fruit, and through it the river of peace and a thousand tor
life,
How
rents of pure joys, where the elect are inebri ated with long draughts of glory and happiness
whence
;
the throne of the living God, radiates a splendor which illumines all
in its centre
is
the city, and before which all the elect are bur ied in adoration, and about which range the angels with golden harps, the brilliant cheru
bim and the seraphim, with hearts burning with love. Such are the marvels which the Apostle But all St. John tells us of the city of God. tell us does not ap no human tongue could it, no intelligence compre
that he has been able to
proach the reality speak worthily of
hend it
it,
until the
;
day when
it
shall
contemplate
unveiled
On
leaving this world
we
shall see with
eyes what we now believe without shall
and
seeing.
our
We
see the splendors of the heavenly city, we shall see its glorious inhabitants, the
men admitted to the society of the Yes, men are admitted there, but only,
angels, and
angels. as St. John says, alter having washed their robes mid made them ivJiite in the b.ood of the Lauib k
(Apoc.
vii.
Now, we
14).
shall see all these saints
and blessed
PARADISE. inhabitants of heaven liant
as so
;
we
435
shall see
them
bril
suns in the kingdom of their we shall see the angels, who
many
heavenly Father will greet us as brothers; the saints, who will embrace us with transport, recognizing us as brothers in arms, friends. We shall see the Blessed Virgin in her royal splendor; we shall see our immaculate, glorious Mother, who w ill receive us as beloved children. We shall see Jesus Christ Himself in His glory. He will present us to His Father, who will cause us to hear these ineffable words This ;
r
.
.
.
:
my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased, because he is conformable to the image of my only Son. Well done, good and faithful servant ; enter is
joy of thy Lord ! What then shall our shall enter into the joy of happiness be our God as into an ocean of ineffable delight, into the
!
where we
We
shall
abide lor
will be the beatitude of II.
The
Beatitude.
ineffable;
it
is
all
eternity.
This
heaven. beatitude of heaven
is
a supernatural and perfect beati
tude. i.
The
beatitude of heaven
no tongue can
is
ineffable.
If
the beauty of heaven it is equally impossible to express the happiness which the elect enjoy in heaven. God rewards
as
God- -that
tell
with
infinite
magnificence. gives a kingdom, and the least of the blessed is richer than all the is,
For a glass of water
He
SODALITY DIRECTOR
436
monarchs the Lord
S
MANUAL.
A day
of the earth.
in
the courts of
better than thousands of days in the
is
_/
joys of this world. Just as an hour in the tor ments of hell shall be more severe than a hun dred years of penance on earth, so an hour in
heaven is more precious than a hundred years of happiness in this life; and one day of this beatitude shall be a reward which a long life of penance and labor
will not suffice
merit*
to
The sufferings of this time are not worthy to be compared zuit/i the glory to come, that shall be re vealed in us (Rom. viii. 18). For that which is at present momentary and light of our tribulation worketh for us above measure exceedingly an eter nal ^veigllt of glory (2 Cor. iv. 17).
What,
is
then,
and what may of faith
gifts
called
?
the
happiness of the elect,
we know of it through the The happiness of the elect,
excellence beatitude, is a supernatural
par and perfect beatitude, which excludes all woes, which contains all blessings for soul and body, which shall be proportioned to the merit of each one. 2.
It is
a supernatural beatitude, superior to
the order of nature
;
it
is
perfect,
and much
of the just on earth it ex cludes all woes, for the Holy Spirit tells us God shall wipe away all tears ; and death shall be no more, nor mourning, nor crying, nor sorroiv (Apoc.
better than
that
;
:
xxi. 4),
PARADI~E. contains
It
all
The
soul happy.
437
blessings which render the beatitude of the soul consists
essentially in the possession of God through the This fruitive intuition of the beatific vision.
divine essence, this view of God face to face, this contemplation of His beauties and His in finite charms, much clearer and more distinct than the view of corporal beauties, enraptures the soul with an ineffable love which inflames her with the sweetest fire, which unites her to God, which plunges her in God as into an ocean of love, where she is buried in the purest joys They shall be inebriated with the plenty of :
Thy house
xxxv.
(Ps.
mation of the soul ...
we
because
Him,
to
Hence the transfor We shall be like glory
9).
in
:
sitall see
Him
as
He
is (i
John
V
ill.
2).
human
The vision
soul
by means
is
of a
raised
new
light,
to this sublime
which
is
called
Inundated with this light, she through no veil, but as a child
the light of glory.
beholds
God
father; she sees the mystery Trinity and all the perfections of
sees the face of
of the
Holy
its
the divine essence-
-its
wisdom,
its
power,
its
beauty she sees with eternal gratitude God s ineffable mercy to her she sees with in comparable joy her innumerable brethren, the blessed citizens of the holy city, all children of the same heavenly Father. Each of the infinite
;
;
elect sees that
which particularly concerns and
438
SJDALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
which
interests
him on earth
:
pontiffs their
their
church, kings kingdom, parents their children those who are venerated on the altar see also the homage, the prayers which are ;
offered
them by the
living.
Besides the beatific vision, and the enraptur ing society of the angels and suints, the blessed also enjoy the sweet certainty that their happi ness can never end. Heavenly happiness contains also all bless ings for the body, all corporal perfections. The
them at their glorious re when our Lord shall reform the body
blessed shall receive surrection, of their lowness by
His glory
(Phil.
iii.
making
it
like to the
body of
21).
The glory of the risen body is comprised new qualities which are communicated
four it:
in
to
transparency, subtility, agility, perfect im
passibility.
We
give the name transparency to the truly They heavenly beauty of glorified bodies. shall be luminous as stars, as suns, for our Saviour Himself tells us: Then shall the just shine as the sun in the kingdom of their Father (Matt. xiii. 43), but with a light very superior to that of this world a light which communi cates to
The
them incomparable grace and beauty. showed us a reflection of it
divine Master
His transfiguration. His face shone as the sun, the Gospel tells us; but its brightness was
in
PARADISE.
439
above that of our earthly planet, and trans ported the apostles so that they were beside far
themselves. Subtility enables them to penetrate all bodies It is sown as easily as light penetrates crystal. rise a shall it a natural body, says the apostle,
Cor. xv. 44)- -that is, suitable to be the instrument of a glorified spirit, with no material matter to impede the movement and
spiritual body
(i
operations of this spirit. Agility is the faculty of being able to trans port one s self through the universe with in
The body, says St. Augus will tine, find itself, in the twinkling of an eye, wlierever the spirit wills it (St. Aug., De Civit., credible rapidity.
i.
22, cap. ult.)
Impassibility shall render
them not only invul
nerable but inaccessible to
all impressions of St. Paul signalizes this quality, say sorrow. The body is sown in corruption, it shall rise ing in incorruption (i Cor. xv. 42). By this expres be must sion understood perfect incorruption, more perfect than that of diamonds and of :
and which
stars,
invulnerable,
will
render glorified bo,dies
unalterable,
and
immortal
like
spirits.
The the will
principle of these glorious qualities of body shall be the glory of the soul, which
communicate
celestial beatitude
earthly substance its The glory of the soul, says
to :
its
SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
440 St.
Thomas,
Gent.,
i.
shall be reflected in the body (Cont.
4. c. 86).
The bodies but they
blessed, being immortal have no more need of food, all that is purest and holiest
of the
and impassible,
will
will taste
For
in the joys of sense.
reprobates are punished for
having abused them,
just that the through their senses if it
it is
is
also just that the
rewarded through their senses having subjected them to the mortification
saints should be
for
of Jesus Christ. Therefore their ears will be charmed with the most harmonious sounds, their eyes ravished by ineffable beauty- -the
Man God,
beauty of the all
the
blessed
;
of the
of his holy Mother, of marvels of nature as
well which they may contemplate throughout the whole extent of creation finally, the in ;
effable delights with *.^7
which the soul
ed shall spread through
all
its
is
inundat-
corporal sub
How
stance.
of hosts
!
the living
My God
lovely are thy tabernacles, O Lord heart and my flesh have rejoiced in
(Ps. Ixxxiii. 2).
The
beatitude and glory shall be proportion ed to each one s merit. All the elect shall see
God, all shall possess God and enjoy all good God, but not all in the same manner or de In the Church triumphant, as in the gree. Church militant, there are hierarchical degrees. Hence these words of our Saviour: /;/ my in
Father
s
house there are
many mansions (John
xiv.
PARADISE. 2),
and these of
sun, another
St.
Paul
:
tlie
tJie
441
One
is the glory of the moon, and another the
glory of For star differeth glory of the stars.
glory, so also
is
the resurrection
from
of
the
star in
dead
(i
Cor. xv. 41, 42). This inequality in the elect shall depend, not on the knowledge which they shall have pos sessed, nor the dignity nor the rank they shall have held, on earth, but on the merit of each one his degree of sanctifying grace, the vir tues he shall have practised, particularly his humility, his charity, his labors, and the part
he shall have had in the cross of Jesus Christ. Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, he is the greater in the kingdom of heaven (Matt, xviii. 4). Charity, says the apostle, is the first, the most excellent of all virtues, because it
makes us love God with our whole heart, and thus merits for us the richest reward. There That eye hath the same apostle declares not seen, nor ear heard, neither hatJi it entered into the heart of man, what things God hath pre
fore
:
pared for them that love him (i Cor. ii. 9). Each one, St. Paul also tells us, shall receive his own reward according to his own labor (i Cor. iii. 8). If we suffer with Jesus Christ we shall be Yet so if we suffer with glorified with Him that we be also glorified with Him Him, may :
(Rom.
viii.
17).
sufferings, so shall
As
you are partakers of the you be also of the consolation
276061 SODALITY DIRECTOR S MANUAL.
442 (2
Cor.
i.
7).
When they shall revile yon and be glad and rejoice, for your reward
persecute you, is very great in heaven (Matt. v. 12). Should we not rejoice at sight of the ineffa ble blessings
which await us?
Above
all
ought
we
not attach ourselves with inviolable fidelity to the service of the Lord, who promises such
rewards? O Holy Virgin, our Mother and our Protectress! it is thou who shalt obtain for thy children that fidelity unto death it is through thee, O Blessed Gate of heaven that ;
!
we
shall enter this ineffable abode.
END.